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Anthropology, History, and Education

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ISBN-10: 0521181216

ISBN-13: 9780521181211

Edition: 2011

Authors: Robert B. Louden, G�nter Z�ller, Immanuel. Kant

List price: $39.99
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This collection contains all of Kant's major writings on human nature. Some of these works, which were published over a thirty-nine year period between 1764 and 1803, have never before been translated into English.
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Book details

List price: $39.99
Copyright year: 2011
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 2/10/2011
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 614
Size: 5.98" wide x 8.82" long x 1.30" tall
Weight: 2.134
Language: English

The greatest of all modern philosophers was born in the Baltic seaport of Konigsberg, East Prussia, the son of a saddler and never left the vicinity of his remote birthplace. Through his family pastor, Immanuel Kant received the opportunity to study at the newly founded Collegium Fredericianum, proceeding to the University of Konigsberg, where he was introduced to Wolffian philosophy and modern natural science by the philosopher Martin Knutzen. From 1746 to 1755, he served as tutor in various households near Konigsberg. Between 1755 and 1770, Kant published treatises on a number of scientific and philosophical subjects, including one in which he originated the nebular hypothesis of the…    

Introduction
Observations on the feeling of the beautiful and sublime (1764)
Essay on the maladies of the head (1764)
Review of Moscati's work of the corporeal essential differences between the structure of animals and humans (1771)
Of the different races of human beings (1775)
Essays regarding the philanthropinum (1776/1777)
A note to Physicians (1782)
Idea for a universal history with a cosmopolitan aim (1784)
Reviews of J. G. Herder's Ideas for the Philosophy of the History of Humanity, Parts 1 and 2 (1785)
Determination of the concept of a human race (1785)
Conjectural beginning of human history (1786)
Some remarks on Ludwig Heinrich Jakob's examination of Mendelssohn's Morning Hours (1786)
On the Philosophers' medicine of the body (1786)
On the use of teleological principles in philosophy (1788)
From Soemmerring's On the Organ of the Soul (1796)
Anthropology from a pragmatic point of view (1798)
Postscript to Christian Gottlieb Mielcke's Lithuanian-German and German-Lithuanian Dictionary (1800)
Lectures on pedagogy (1803)