Immanuel Kant - Biography
Immanuel
Kant (1724-1804)
Immanuel Kant was born in Königsberg, East Prussia in
1724. He attended the Collegium Fridiricianum at the age of eight, a Latin
school that taught primarily classicism. After over eight years of study there,
he went into the University Of Königsberg, where he spent his academic career
focusing on philosophy, mathematics and physics. The death of his father had a
strong effect on Kant, he left the university and earned a living as a private
tutor. However, in 1755 he accepted the help of a friend and resumed study,
receiving his doctorate in 1756.
He taught at the university and remained there for 15
years, beginning his lectures on the sciences and mathematics, though over time
he covered most branches of philosophy. In spite of his growing reputation as
an original thinker, he did not gain tenure at the university until 1770,
receiving his professorship of logic and metaphysics. He continued writing and
lecturing at Königsberg for the next 27 years, drawing many students there due
to his rationalist and hence, unorthodox approach to religious texts. This led
to political pressure from the government of Prussia, and in 1792, he was
barred from teaching or writing on religious subjects by the king, Fredrich
William II. Kant dutifully obeyed the injunction until the death of the king
five years later, returning to the writing and lecturing of his ideas. The year
following his retirement, he published a summary of his views on religion. He
died in 1804.
Kant devised a model, an individual epistemology, by
examining the basis of human knowledge and its limits. He brought together the
ideas of rationalism, influential thinkers such as Leibniz and Wolff, with
empiricism as proposed by David Hume. Kant's critical philosophy is presented
in the Critique of Pure
Reason (1781); the idea of critique is to establish and investigate
the legitimate limits of human knowledge. Knowledge of sensible objects must
form itself in advance to the structures of the human mind's ability to reason,
and therefore all objects conform themselves a
priori in such a relation -legitimate knowledge of objects is
limited to how they appear for us.
Kant's logic creates a division and complex interplay of
judgments- a priori and a posteriori judgments and analytic or synthetic
judgments. A judgment is analytic if the subject of its proposition is
contained within its predicate, i.e. "Sound theories are theories".
To state the reverse would be a logical absurdity. The judgment is considered
analytic because the truth of the proposition lies in the validity of the
concept itself. All analytic judgments are a priori and thus, as is the case
for all a priori judgments, they are independent of experience. However,
judgments about empirical knowledge can only be made upon experience, are
synthetic, a posteriori, and can be reversed without such a contradiction, i.e.
"The theory is sound".
Here unfolds three classes of judgments: a) analytic a
priori, b) synthetic a posteriori, and c) synthetic a priori. The particular
concern for Kant is the synthetic a priori, for the sciences and mathematics
are as such, existing independent of experience and yet as syntheses of
previous judgments (knowledge). The question as to the origins of judgments
becomes necessary. Metaphysics describes a science concerned with this inquiry,
a solution to unsolvable problems set by pure reason itself, namely the
concepts of God, freedom
and immortality.
Kant developed a system of ethics in Metaphysics of Ethics
(1797), in which he places reason as the fundamental authority for morality.
Any action born of a mere expediency or servitude to law, politic or custom
could be considered as moral, a sense of duty must arise solely as prescribed
by reason. Reason dictates two imperatives: the hypothetical and the
categorical. In the case of the former, a course of action to accomplish a
specific task is presented, and in the latter a course of action that presents
itself as appropriate, and necessary. The categorical is the basis for the
ethical. This structure defends a fundamental freedom of the individual; that
each one be responsible for their own ability, through reason, to obey
consciously the laws of the universe.
Kantian philosophy was to have an enormous impact on
modern philosophy as well as the fine arts and literature. Hegel was to develop
the dialectical method based on elements within the Critique of Pure Reason, which in turn
functioned as an underlying structure in Marx's philosophy.
Source : http://www.egs.edu/library/immanuel-kant/biography/
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