Book symposium on Katharina Kraus, Kant on Self-Knowledge and Self-Formation, 2020

Table ronde/ Book symposium on Katharina Kraus’ new book Kant on Self-Knowledge and Self-Formation (Cambridge UP, 2020). A short abstract of the book can be found below.

The event will take place on June 7, 2021, 6 - 8 pm Paris time (CEST) in an online format. The symposium will include comments by Stefanie Buchenau (Paris 8), Patrick Frierson (Whitman College), and Allen Wood (Bloomington), as well as a reply by the author. Béatrice Longuenesse (NYU) will join the session as a special discussant.
 
Please register for the event here : stefanie.buchenau@univ-paris8.fr
You will receive a Zoom link upon registration.
 
 

Kant on Self-Knowledge and Self-Formation
The Nature of Inner Experience

Katharina T. Kraus

As the pre-eminent Enlightenment philosopher, Kant famously calls on all humans to make up their own minds, independently from the constraints imposed on them by others. Kant’s focus, however, is on universal human reason, and he tells us little about what makes us individual persons. In this book, Katharina T. Kraus explores Kant’s distinctive account of psychological personhood by unfolding how, according to Kant, we come to know ourselves as such persons. Drawing on Kant’s Critical works and on his Lectures and Reflections, Kraus develops the first textually comprehensive and systematically coherent account of our capacity for what Kant calls ’inner experience’. The novel view of self-knowledge and self-formation in Kant that she offers addresses present-day issues in philosophy of mind and will be relevant for contemporary philosophical debates. It will be of interest to scholars of the history of philosophy, as well as of philosophy of mind and psychology.


Organized by EA "Mondes allemands : histoire des idées et des représentations", université Paris 8 Saint-Denis.