In 'Twin-Earth Externalism Revisited', Simon Dierig points out an unsuccessful attempt to ground externalism in Putnam's twin-Earth thought experiment (that of Tyler Burge), but claims that a case for it can nevertheless be made based on the stated example. All CJP papers are open access. #philsky
In 'Words Without Intentions', J.T.M. Miller analyses a standard assumption in metaphysics of language that for a tokening of a word, intentions are jointly or independently necessary or sufficient. Miller offers a counterexample. All CJP papers are open access. #philsky
In 'Two Faces of Politics: Political Implications of Kant’s Aesthetics', Lukas Ivanauskas proposes an unorthodox reading of Kant’s aesthetics of the beautiful and the sublime in the light of Schmitt’s concept of the political. All CJP papers are open access. #philsky
In 'Kant on Educating for Disgust...', Serena Feloj discusses the role of digust in Kant's conception of moral education. She argues that digust is valuable pedagogical and cultural tool in the process of human civilization and refinement. All CJP papers are open access. #philsky
To the critics of her book 'The Critique of Judgment and the Unity of Kant’s Critical System' - Andrija Šoć, Monika Jovanović, Ted Kinnaman, and Luigi Filieri (all contained in this CJP special issue) - Lara Ostaric offers an exhaustive response. All CJP papers are open access. #philsky
In ‘Commentary on Ostaric’s Critique of Judgment…’, Ted Kinnaman argues that Ostaric’s ‘moral image realism’ can’t secure a realist link between reflective judgment and nature, and that Kant’s real solution lies in aesthetic judgment and the role of pleasure. All CJP papers are open access. #philsky
In ‘Unity, Freedom, and History…’, Andrija Šoć, building on Lara Ostaric’s thesis, argues Kant’s primacy of the practical makes freedom a transcendental condition even for theoretical cognition, so the moral ‘image’ has real historical-political significance. All CJP papers are open access. #philsky
In 'Beautiful Mind, Unconquerable Soul: Productive Imagination and the Unity of Kant’s System', Monika Jovanović, leaning on Lara Ostaric's views about Kant's aesthetics, claims that Kant was an aesthetic cognitivist in a strong sense of the word. All CJP papers are open-access. #philsky
In 'Aim of Nature, Aims of Freedom', Luigi Filieri challenges Lara Ostaric’s reading of Kant’s teleological philosophy of history, arguing that the 'aim of nature' is at most a regulative, analogical lens, and not a real driver of moral progress. All CJP papers are open-access. #philsky