•  364
    Debating Allison on Transcendental Idealism
    with Allen W. Wood and Henry E. Allison
    Kantian Review 12 (2): 1-39. 2007.
    People talk about rats deserting a sinking ship, but they don't usually ask where the rats go. Perhaps this is only because the answer is so obvious: of course, most of the rats climb aboard the sounder ships, the ships that ride high in the water despite being laden with rich cargoes of cheese and grain and other things rats love, the ships that bring prosperity to ports like eighteenth-century Königsberg and firms such as Green & Motherby. By making the insulting comparison - as I am in the co…Read more
  •  306
    Disinterestedness and desire in Kant's aesthetics
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 36 (4): 449-460. 1978.
  •  264
    Kant and the Claims of Taste
    Cambridge University Press. 1979.
    Kant and the Claims of Taste, published here for the first time in paperback in a revised version, has become, since its initial publication in 1979, the standard commentary on Kant's aesthetic theory. The book offers a detailed account of Kant's views on judgments of taste, aesthetic pleasure, imagination and many other topics. For this new edition, Paul Guyer has provided a new foreword and has added a chapter on Kant's conception of fine art. This re-issue will complement the author's compani…Read more
  •  238
    Schopenhauer, Kant and Compassion
    Kantian Review 17 (3): 403-429. 2012.
    Schopenhauer presents his moral philosophy as diametrically opposed to that of Kant: for him, pure practical reason is an illusion and morality can arise only from the feeling of compassion, while for Kant it cannot be based on such a feeling and can be based only on pure practical reason. But the difference is not as great as Schopenhauer makes it seem, because for him compassion is supposed to arise from metaphysical insight into the unity of all being, thus from pure if theoretical reason, wh…Read more
  •  217
    This collection of essays by one of the preeminent Kant scholars of our time transforms our understanding of both Kant's aesthetics and his ethics. Guyer shows that at the very core of Kant's aesthetic theory, disinterestedness of taste becomes an experience of freedom and thus an essential accompaniment to morality itself. At the same time he reveals how Kant's moral theory includes a distinctive place for the cultivation of both general moral sentiments and particular attachments on the basis …Read more
  •  199
    Kant on the theory and practice of autonomy
    Social Philosophy and Policy 20 (2): 70-98. 2003.
    We all know what Kant means by autonomy: “the property of the will by which it is a law to itself ” , or, since any law must be universal, the condition of an agent who is “subject only to laws given by himself but still universal” . Or do we know what Kant means by autonomy? There are a number of questions here. First, Kant's initial definition of autonomy itself raises the question of why the property of the will being a law to itself should be equivalent to its independence from any property …Read more
  •  190
    Kant and the Ends of Aesthetics
    Mind 111 (442): 363-366. 2002.
    "The importance and significance of Kant's aesthetics have been widely debated. This work presents an original interpretation of Kant's account which is based on rethinking the nature of Critical Philosophy. Gary Banham presents the argument that the Critique of Judgment needs to be read as a whole. Aesthetics is investigated in relation to all three critiques with the recovery of a larger sense of the 'aesthetic' resulting. This broader notion of aesthetics is connected to the recovery of the c…Read more
  •  182
    Critique of the Power of Judgment
    with Hannah Ginsborg, Immanuel Kant, and Eric Matthews
    Philosophical Review 111 (3): 429. 2002.
    This new translation is an extremely welcome addition to the continuing Cambridge Edition of Kant’s works. English-speaking readers of the third Critique have long been hampered by the lack of an adequate translation of this important and difficult work. James Creed Meredith’s much-reprinted translation has charm and elegance, but it is often too loose to be useful for scholarly purposes. Moreover it does not include the first version of Kant’s introduction, the so-called “First Introduction,” w…Read more
  •  180
    Kant's Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals: Critical Essays (edited book)
    Rowman & Littlefield. 1997.
    This collection of essays, the first of its kind in nearly thirty years, introduces the reader to some of the most important studies of the book from the past ...
  •  170
    The Derivation of the Categorical Imperative
    The Harvard Review of Philosophy 10 (1): 64-80. 2002.
  •  169
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  •  154
    Kant on common sense and scepticism
    Kantian Review 7 1-37. 2003.
    Is the refutation of scepticism a central objective for Kant? Some commentators have denied that the refutation of either theoretical or moral scepticism was central to Kant's concerns. Thus, in his recent book Kant and the Fate of Autonomy, Karl Ameriks rejects 'taking Kant to be basically a respondent to the skeptic'. According to Ameriks, who here has Kant's theoretical philosophy in mind,What Kant goes on to propose is that, instead of focusing on trying to establish with certainty – against…Read more
  •  150
    Kant and the Claims of Knowledge
    Cambridge University Press. 1987.
    This book offers a radically new account of the development and structure of the central arguments of Kant's Critique of Pure Reason: the defense of the objective validity of such categories as substance, causation, and independent existence. Paul Guyer makes far more extensive use than any other commentator of historical materials from the years leading up to the publication of the Critique and surrounding its revision, and he shows that the work which has come down to us is the result of some …Read more
  •  144
    Kant and the Philosophy of Architecture
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 69 (1): 7-19. 2011.
  •  138
    The possibility of the categorical imperative
    Philosophical Review 104 (3): 353-385. 1995.
  •  137
    The Harmony of the Faculties in Recent Books on the Critique of the Power of Judgment
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 67 (2): 201-221. 2009.
    When I began working on my dissertation on Kant’s aesthetic theory in 1971, I was able to read virtually all of the extant literature on the Critique of Judgment in English, German, andFrench going back to Hermann Cohen’s Kants Begr¨undung der A¨ sthetik of 1889, while also reading most of what I wanted to read of eighteenth-century British and German aesthetics before Kant—not because I had paid my dues to Evelyn Wood, but just because there was not all that much to read.1 I pity the graduate s…Read more
  •  129
    Back to truth: Knowledge and pleasure in the aesthetics of Schopenhauer
    European Journal of Philosophy 16 (2): 164-178. 2008.
    No Abstract
  •  129
    The Psychology Of Kant’s Aesthetics
    Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 39 (4): 483-494. 2008.
    Contrary to both his own intentions and the views of both older and more recent commentators, I argue that Kant’s aesthetics remains within the confines of eighteenth-century aesthetics as a branch of empirical psychology, as it was then practiced. Kant established a plausible connection between aesthetic experience and judgment on the one hand and cognition in general on the other, through his explanatory concept of the free play of our cognitive powers. However, there is nothing distinctly ‘a …Read more
  •  128
    Hegel, Leibniz, and the contradiction in the finite
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 40 (1): 75-98. 1979.
  •  128
    Kant
    Routledge. 2006.
    In this updated edition of his outstanding introduction to Kant, Paul Guyer uses Kant’s central conception of autonomy as the key to his thought. Beginning with a helpful overview of Kant’s life and times, Guyer introduces Kant’s metaphysics and epistemology, carefully explaining his arguments about the nature of space, time and experience in his most influential but difficult work, _The Critique of Pure Reason_. He offers an explanation and critique of Kant’s famous theory of transcendental ide…Read more
  •  125
    The Mind Bursary
    with Frank Cioffi Obscurantism, G. A. Equality, Keith Graham, Peter Carruthers, Cynthia MacDonald, Paul Snowden, Howard Robinson, David Over, and Ralph Walker
    Mind 99 394. 1990.