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  2. – Kant was adamant that God could not be proved in any positive way. Not by reason, nor ‘revelation’ (he wrote a critique of the Christian mystic, Swedenborg). However, he did argue – in the 2 nd Critique – that one could assume God existed because morality existed.

  3. Jun 22, 2004 · Kant’s Philosophy of Religion during the Critical Period. 3.1 God in the Critique of Pure Reasons Transcendental Dialectic. 3.1.1 The Ens Realissimum. 3.1.2 Kant’s critique of the traditional arguments for Gods existence. 3.2 Kant on Deism and Theism. 3.3 Religion and Theoretical Knowledge.

    • Lawrence Pasternack, Courtney Fugate
    • 2004
  4. May 20, 2010 · To see why, consider what would happen if we did not believe in God or immortality, according to Kant. In the Critique of Pure Reason, Kant seems to say that this would leave us without any incentive to be moral, and even that the moral law would be invalid without God and immortality (A813/B841, A468/B496). But Kant later rejects this view (8: ...

    • Kant and Religion. This article does not present a full biography of Kant. A more general account of his life can be found in the article Kant’s Aesthetics.
    • God in Some Pre-critical Writings. Kant’s pre-critical writings are those that precede his Inaugural Dissertation of 1770, which marked his assumption of the chair in logic and metaphysics at the university.
    • Each Critique as Pivotal. The heart of Kant’s philosophical system is the triad of books constituting his great critiques: his Critique of Pure Reason, published in 1781 (the A edition), with a significantly revised second edition appearing in 1787 (the B edition); his Critique of Practical Reason, published in 1788; and his Critique of Judgment, published in 1790.
    • The Prolegomena and Kant’s Lectures. a. The Prolegomena. Most—but not all—of the religious epistemology that is of note in Kant’s Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics is already contained in his more philosophically impressive first Critique and will not be repeated here.
  5. Kant's criticisms of the arguments for the existence of God typically used in rationalist metaphysics remain among the most influential elements of his heritage. This influence extends not merely to later discussions of these arguments in philosophy of religion but also enters into views of the history of philosophy that see these criticisms as ...

  6. Apr 25, 2012 · At the very least, Kant thereby suggests that the inseparability of the normative content of his practical philosophy from his "metaphysical" claims about the freedom of the will, immortality, and the existence of God must be demonstrated, and opens the door to those who would separate the former from the latter.

  7. Dec 31, 2023 · This volume provides a highly needed, comprehensive analysis of Kant's views on proofs for God's existence and explains the radical turns of Kant's accounts. In the "Theory of Heavens" (1755), Kant intended to harmonize the Newtonian laws of motion with a physicotheological argument for the existence of God. But only a few years later, in the ...

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