Immanuel Kants work continues to be a main focus of attention in almost all areas of philosophy. The significance of Kants work for the so-called continental philosophy cannot be exaggerated, although work in this area is relatively scant. The book includes eight chapters, a substantial introduction and a postscript, all newly written by an international cast of well-known authors. Each chapter focuses on particular aspects of a fundamental problem in Kants and post-Kantian philosophy, the problem of the relation between the world and transcendence. Chapters fall thematically into three parts: sensibility, nature and religion. Each part starts with a more interpretative chapter focusing on Kants relevant work, and continues with comparative chapters which stage dialogues between Kant and post-Kantian philosophers, including Martin Heidegger, Hannah Arendt, Jean-Franēois Lyotard, Luce Irigaray and Jacques Derrida. A special feature of this volume is the engagement of each chapter with the work of the late British philosopher Gary Banham. The Postscript offers a subtle and erudite analysis of his intellectual trajectory, philosophy and mode of working. The volume is dedicated to his memory.
Part I. Introduction
1. Kant and the Continental Tradition
Sorin Baiasu and Alberto Vanzo
Part II. Sensibility
2. Kant on Intuition
Dermot Moran
3. Heideggers Interpretation of Kants Transcendental Schematism
Roxana Baiasu
4. On Affective Universality: Kant, Arendt and Lyotard on Sensus Communis
Andrea Rehberg
Part III. Nature
5. The Role of Regulative Principles and their Relation to Reflective
Judgement
Christian Onof
6. Disputing Critique: Lyotards Kantian Differend
Keith Crome
7. Kant, Hegel and Irigaray: From Chemism to the Elemental
Rachel Jones
Part IV. Religion
8. The Schematism of Analogy and the Figure of Christ: Bridging Two Types of
Hypotyposis
Nicola Crosby
9. The Proper Tone of Critical Philosophy: Kant and Derrida on
Metaphilosophy and the Use of Religious Tropes
Dennis Schulting
Part V. Postscript
10. Remembering Gary Banham: Genealogy, Teleology and Conceptuality
Joanna Hodge
Sorin Baiasu is Professor of Philosophy at Keele University, Director of the Keele-Oxford-St Andrews Kantian (KOSAK) Research Centre and Co-convenor of the Kantian Standing Group of the European Consortium for Political Research. He published Kant and Sartre: Re-discovering Critical Ethics (2011), edited several collections on Kant and published articles in, among others, Kant-Studien, Kantian Review and Studi Kantiani.
Alberto Vanzo is an independent scholar. He has published a monograph on Kants views on concept formation (Kant e la formazione dei concetti, 2012) and essays on Kants philosophy, early modern natural philosophy and the history of philosophical historiography.