•  107
    Kant's Anatomy of Evil (edited book)
    with Sharon Anderson-Gold
    Cambridge University Press. 2009.
    Kant infamously claimed that all human beings, without exception, are evil by nature. This collection of essays critically examines and elucidates what he must have meant by this indictment. It shows the role which evil plays in his overall philosophical project and analyses its relation to individual autonomy. Furthermore, it explores the relevance of Kant's views for understanding contemporary questions such as crimes against humanity and moral reconstruction. Leading scholars in the field eng…Read more
  • Immanuel Kant
    In Dale Southerton (ed.), Encyclopedia of Consumer Culture, Sage Publications. pp. 827-828. 2011.
    This article offers a short biography of Kant and explains why his work was so important.
  •  59
    The aim of Kant’s Sources in Translation is to retrieve the rich intellectual world that influenced Kant’s philosophical development. In its first stage, the series makes available the most important textbooks Kant used throughout his long teaching career. Many of these textbooks are in Latin or in German and remain inaccessible to Anglophone readers. Lacking this material, however, it is difficult to appreciate Kant’s originality and process of philosophical maturation, for readers are unable t…Read more
  •  645
    Kant y la antinomia de la razón "política" moderna
    Revista Latinoamericana de Filosofia 34 (1): 39-61. 2008.
    ABSTRACT: Kant and Mendelssohn published almost simultaneously influential essays on the Enlightenment. I use this historical contingency as occasion to reflect on the presuppositions and implications their views have with respect to philosophy and politics. In the first part, I compare Mendelssohn's discursive strategy with that of traditional liberalism. A contradiction emerges from this contrast, which, in the second part, I interpret in Kantian terms as an antinomy of modern political reason…Read more