Sure, why not. But can you in a sentence or three sum up just what his religious "orientation" was?There is a Lutheran priest named Jordan Cooper who has at least one lecture on Kant which digs into his Pietism a bit. Kant's religious orientation seems to me obvious, as well as colors of Protestant fideism. — Leontiskos
Does being among humanity's strongest thinkers, professional grade mathematician, and a world class physicist indicate that Pietism is no-longer nourishing or rational?
— Moliere
Right: that is the crucial (anti-religious) assumption at play. — Leontiskos
That is, Pietism might well have inculcated in Kant a thing or two, but then, with respect to what was inculcated and is here in question, he took it over and owned it and established it on a whole other footing, one arguably far better. . — tim wood
Peter Simpson makes this point almost exactly. — Leontiskos
I am told that in Kant's later work he makes exceptions to the unknowableness of the noumenal on account of morality. — Leontiskos
Right: that is the crucial (anti-religious) assumption at play. — Leontiskos
I didn't quite follow that conclusion, either. But it is Protestant at least insofar as it is individualistic, subjectivistic, and arguably fideistic. — Leontiskos
I'm still hesitant, and starting to see how this is a technical question in the philosophy of religion more than about Kant at all — Moliere
Oh yeah? Where?
It's always nice to find agreement. — Moliere
Morality becomes a kind of universalizing of self-interest. [...] , one will find that it is little more than an elaboration of Hobbesian peace. — Peter L. P. Simpson, Autonomous Morality and the Idea of the Noble
Not quite, in my estimation. I'd prefer to say that he argues that there is more than one legitimate use or power of reason other than theoretical (scientific) knowledge. — Moliere
Yeh. Which, especially considering it's Kant, I'd say isn't warranted at all. Even in his philosophical work he's pro-religion, while obviously arguing for rationality too. — Moliere
What do you make of the syllogism above? Where Kant is a Lutheran (due to Pietism), and all Lutherns are Protestants, therefore....? — Moliere
↪tim wood has a good point in that he's not really "claimable" by religion -- in the culture wars sense — Moliere
I feel the same way, but perhaps from a different point of view. I don’t think we have the authority to suggest for Kant anything he didn’t admit for himself.
I’m not saying he never mentioned the influence his religious upbringing may have had on the formulation of his moral philosophy, only that I’ve yet to find out about it. And from that it follows necessarily at least I have no warrant for understanding such philosophy as if it were conditioned by it. — Mww
I found a five-minute lecture - is that what you were referring to? If a longer, can you provide a reference? — tim wood
Sure, why not. But can you in a sentence or three sum up just what his religious "orientation" was? — tim wood
My read is that he found in Pietism certain claims that were founded in Pietist faith that he Kant found grounded in reason, reason for Kant being the more compelling, and dare we say, the more reasonable. — tim wood
Or if I may be permitted a metaphor, religion is like a stool with two legs: it does not stand on its own. Kant attached a third leg, and now at least some of its ideas can stand on any surface. Do you find any fault in this? — tim wood
If Kant never mentioned the influence his religious upbringing may have had on the formulation of his moral philosophy, [then] I have no warrant for understanding such philosophy as if it were conditioned by it. — Mww
And from a gravity perspective, gravity is how Simone Biles became one of the world's great gymnasts. The point, maybe, being that Pietism may be the source of, or account for, some of Kant's nascent beliefs, but the attribution pretends also to be an account for Kant himself, his post-Pietist thinking - and that is a claim if made to be demonstrated and proved. That is, Kant as either a Pietist apologist, or as the sui generis thinker he's usually regarded as being.So from a Catholic perspective.... — Leontiskos
That is, Kant as either a Pietist apologist, or as the sui generis thinker he's usually regarded as being. — tim wood
But the greater the claim, the more to be resisted, if for no other reason - aside from being wrong - that it tends to vitiate and trivialize Kant's thinking and its effects and value — tim wood
Indeed not, but becomes so the harder the grip of the claim. Just as photos, the closer you get to them, dissolve into spots or pixels. And assess how you like, keeping in mind a good workman knows his tools, what they're for, and how to use them.Or else it's not as black and white as you purport. — Leontiskos
The words of the question matter. As origins and influences, they don't.Why would the religious origins and influences trivialize him, in your view? — Moliere
And just here an assumption I think unjustified, or that at least requires explanation to be sensible. His philosophy is formed from, comes out of, his religion? Do you even know what Kant's (own) religion was? Answer: you don't.and the similarity between his philosophy and the religion from which it was formed — Moliere
The point I made earlier is that Kant's thinking is reason based and religion is not. — tim wood
Kant only secures the nobility and freedom associated with morality at the cost of shifting both into a sphere that lies completely beyond human grasp. The free acts of the will that constitute moral goodness and moral choice are beyond human explanation and comprehension.[27 - footnote to ch. 3 of the Groundwork] — Peter L. P. Simpson, Autonomous Morality and the Idea of the Noble
But the greater the claim, the more to be resisted, if for no other reason - aside from being wrong - that it tends to vitiate and trivialize Kant's thinking and its effects and value — tim wood
The constant refrain that I am hearing from you and Mww is the dogmatic claim that Kant's philosophy simply did not have religious influences. — Leontiskos
Do you even know what Kant's (own) religion was? Answer: you don't. — tim wood
Throughout Kant’s writings, we find ample discussions of religious issues. These are, in many instances, clearly affirmative, though they are often framed within objections to theoretical reason’s encroachments into the domain that is instead proper to faith. Although his discussions of God and immortality are familiar to most Kantians, the Critical corpus moves well beyond just these. Especially in the 1790s, we find detailed treatments of biblical hermeneutics, miracles, revelation, as well as many distinctively Christian doctrines such as Original Sin, the Incarnation, Vicarious Atonement, and the Trinity.
Unfortunately, however, the many positive elements of Kant’s philosophy of religion have been eclipsed by its initial negative moments, moments not meant to oppose religion, but rather reflective of the Lutheranism (or more precisely, the anti-liturgical Lutheran Pietism) of his youth. Just as with Luther’s own negative polemics against religious despotism and scholastic arcana, we see in Kant a parallel dialectic, where he, rather than opposing religion, sought to free it from the “monopoly of the schools” and set it on a footing suitable to “the common human understanding” (Bxxxii). Hence, as we will discuss through this entry, the statement that Kant sought out the limits to knowledge [Wissen] in order to “make room for faith [Glaube]” (Bxxx), is not an empty bromide, but rather the key anthem for his overall philosophy of religion.
What about this part of the article I linked previously? Are the authors of that article stating unwarranted assumptions?And just here an assumption I think unjustified, or that at least requires explanation to be sensible. His philosophy is formed from, comes out of, his religion? — tim wood
The point I made earlier is that Kant's thinking is reason based and religion is not. The result being that while it's possible to read Pietism into Kant - as well as almost anything else if a person has a viewpoint and ambition - it is a different matter altogether to read it out of him. . — tim wood
You did not hear any such thing from me. Actually, I don’t know what you heard, but I know I never said any such thing. — Mww
The constant refrain that I am hearing from you... is the dogmatic claim that Kant's philosophy simply did not have religious influences. — Leontiskos
Not that it matters much, but I will grant there are images of Pietist thinking in Kant. — tim wood
But none of these account for the way, the how, and the why of his own analyses. — tim wood
Fideism is the separation between faith and reason, and the separation is found in different ways in different forms of Protestantism. Folks like Kant and later Schleiermacher emphasize rationalism and protect religion/faith by giving it a purely internal and separate character, and this internalizing is also in line with Pietism. — Leontiskos
The key text representing the revolutionary move from his pre-critical, rationalistic Christian orthodoxy to his critical position (that could later lead to those suggestions of heterodox religious belief) is his seminal Critique of Pure Reason. In the preface to its second edition, in one of the most famous sentences he ever wrote, he sets the theme for this radical transition by writing, “I have therefore found it necessary to deny knowledge, in order to make room for faith” (Critique, B). Though never a skeptic (for example, he was always committed to scientific knowledge), Kant came to limit knowledge to objects of possible experience and to regard ideas of metaphysics (including theology) as matters of rational faith. — Kant's Philosophy of Religion | IEP
Kant: inferior in his psychology and knowledge of human nature; way off when it comes to great historical values (French Revolution); a moral fanatic a la Rousseau; a subterranean Christianity in his values; a dogmatist through and through, but ponderously sick of this inclination, to such an extent that he wished to tyrannize it, but also weary right away of skepticism; not yet touched by the slightest breath of cosmopolitan taste and the beauty of antiquity— a delayer and mediator, nothing original (just as Leibniz mediated and built a bridge between mechanism and spiritualism, as Goethe did between the taste of the eighteenth century and that of the “historical sense”. . . — Nietzsche, The Will to Power, #101
Yes or no?
My thinking is that Kant is protestant, through and through, because while he accepts there are other possible ethics he believes the only rational faith is believing in the Christian doctrine of immortality, free will, and the existence of God.
It's not so much about the baptism into community but about how God influences your ethical life as an individual rational being. — Moliere
The broad idea is that Kant universalizes self-interest, which results in a communal ethic. — Leontiskos
I don't think there is one Protestant ethical outlook — frank
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