Kant In 90 Minutes by Paul Strathern

A brisk, accessible introduction that outlines Immanuel Kant’s life and intellectual context and then explains his central claims: the “Copernican” insight that the mind helps shape experience, the distinction between phenomena and noumena, the role of synthetic a priori judgments and the categories of understanding, and the limits of speculative reason as argued in his Critique of Pure Reason. It also summarizes his moral philosophy emphasizing autonomy and the categorical imperative, touches on his ideas about aesthetics and teleology, and assesses his enduring influence on modern philosophy.

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