The Postulate of Public Right
Patrick Capps, Julian Rivers.
Cambridge University Press janv. 2025 Elements in the Philosophy of Immanuel Kant 78 pages £ 17.00
9781009180566
The Postulate of Public Right

Présentation de l’éditeur

Kant's main work in the philosophy of law – the Doctrine of Right (1797) – is notoriously difficult for modern readers to understand. Kant clearly argues that rightful relations between human beings can only be achieved if we enter into a civil legal condition taking a defined constitutional form. In this Element, we emphasise that Kant considers this claim to be a postulate of practical reason, thus identifying the pure idea of the state as the culmination of his entire practical philosophy. The Doctrine of Right makes sense as an attempt to clarify the content of the postulate of public right and constructively interpret existing domestic and international legal arrangements in the light of the noumenal republic it postulates. Properly understood, Kant's postulate of public right is the epistemological foundation of a non-positivist legal theory that remains of central significance to modern legal philosophy and legal doctrinal method.

Patrick Capps, University of Bristol Law school

Julian Rivers, University of Bristol Law School

 

Sommaire

Introduction

1. From principle to postulate

2. Law in light of the noumenal republic

Afterword

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  • BORDEAUX-UB-BU Droit-Sc. po-eco
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