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Kant, Idea for a Universal History (1784)

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FWeinert, Bradford University UK. 1. Kant, Idea for a Universal History (1784) A running commentary ... Political Institutions, open to rational reconstruction ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Kant, Idea for a Universal History (1784)


1
Kant, Idea for a Universal History (1784)
  • A running commentary
  • by
  • Friedel Weinert

2
Kant, Universal History
  • Some further Principles of the Enlightenment
  • Secularisation of accepted beliefs religion,
    science, morals, politics
  • Politics, subject to rational scrutiny
  • Political Institutions, open to rational
    reconstruction
  • Some Principles of Kants Political Philosophy
  • The state governed according to the rule of law
  • Guarantee of civil liberties
  • Idea of a social contract
  • Rights of a citizen in a state freedom,
    equality, vote
  • Peace between nations federation of states

3
Kant, Universal History
  • Kants Idea of a Universal History
  • Human actions are determined in accordance with
    natural laws
  • This idea is not new to Kant the Enlightenment
    generally believed in the progress of humanity
    towards rationality or perfectibility
    (Condorcet). Marx and Comte believed that human
    societies evolved according to necessary
    historical laws.
  • Kant individuals and collectivities seem to
    pursue no overall rational purpose, but there is
    a hidden plan of nature
  • Human species moves towards a slow and steady
    development of mans original capacities Example
    - the development of science

Some guiding principles for a teleological
history of the human species
4
Kant, Universal History
  • First Proposition
  • There is a teleological order of nature all
    natural capacities of a creature will develop
    according to their purpose
  • Second Proposition
  • Natural capacities in human beings are directed
    towards the use of reason use of justifiable
    rules and methods but they can only fully
    develop in the species, not in the individual. No
    limits are set to the projects of reason
    Perfectibility
  • But it takes time for the natural capacities to
    blossom in the species. Enlightenment acquires a
    history - it is a progress towards the employment
    of reason, in all spheres.
  • The history of science (from Kepler to Newton)
    givens an inkling of this progress - apply to
    social life.

5
Kant, Universal History
  • Third Proposition
  • Humans are responsible for the progress of their
    own species towards enlightenment and
    emancipation, through the cultivation of reason.
  • Fourth Proposition
  • Nature employs antagonism within society to bring
    about the development of innate capacities
  • Antagonism the unsocial sociability in men
  • General resistance of everyone against everyone
    else

Honing of talents, emergence of culture
6
Kant, Universal History
  • Fifth Proposition
  • Nature compels humans to work towards the
    establishment of a civil society
  • Such a civil society can administer universal
    justice
  • Only a just civil constitution will guarantee
    that Nature achieves her aim the emancipation of
    mankind
  • A just civil constitution combines freedom under
    external laws with irresistible force
  • The only laws that can be imposed on a people are
    laws which the people would accept to impose on
    themselves

7
Kant, Universal History
  • Sixth Proposition
  • Man is an animal who needs a master (in the human
    species) the species also needs a master
  • Protection of Freedom through political
    structures
  • Seventh Proposition
  • We can only establish a perfect civic
    constitution if the relations between states
    become subject to law
  • Need for a lawful federation of states under a
    commonly accepted international right
  • Establishment of peace

8
Kant, Universal History
  • Eighth Proposition
  • History of human race as a whole can be
    interpreted as the realisation of a hidden plan
    of nature to bring about a perfect political
    constitution
  • This is the only possible state in which all
    natural capacities of mankind will be realised
  • We must regard the history of the human race as
    unfolding according to Providence a higher
    purpose towards which we are compelled
  • Ninth Proposition
  • A philosophical model of a universal history of
    the human race towards emancipation is a
    regulatory idea it is the perspective from which
    the historical data can be reconstructed
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