What is it about?

This essay explores the development of Georg Simmel’s interpretation of Immanuel Kant’s philosophy in the context of neo-Kantianism and its preoccupation with the question of unity in modern diversity. It argues that the neo-Kantian movement can be divided into two periods: in the first, unity was addressed with regard to Kant’s epistemology; in the second period, the main issue was the overall coherence of Kantian teaching. Simmel, who belonged to the younger generation of neo-Kantians, absorbed the conclusions of the previous generation that purged Kantian epistemology from its metaphysical foundations related to the noumenal world. Yet he did not share the views of his peers who considered Kant to be the philosopher of cultural plurality. On the contrary, he argued that Kant’s system is thoroughly intellectualistic, and that ethics, aesthetics and religion within it are subordinated to logic. At the same time, his own philosophy presupposed cultural plurality akin to that of other neo-Kantians. In other words, Simmel abandoned Kant in order to develop his own version of neo-Kantianism.

Featured Image

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: NEO-KANTIANISM AND GEORG SIMMEL'S INTERPRETATION OF KANT, Modern Intellectual History, December 2014, Cambridge University Press,
DOI: 10.1017/s1479244314000663.
You can read the full text:

Read

Contributors

The following have contributed to this page