Robert B. Louden
Note on Citations and Translations
Introduction
PART I: HUMAN VIRTUES
1. Kant's Virtue Ethics
2. Moral Strength: Virtue as a Duty to Oneself
3. Kantian Moral Humility: Between Aristotle and Paul
4. "Firm as Rock in Her Own Principles" (But Not Necessarily a
Kantian)
PART II: ANTHROPOLOGY AND ETHICS
5. The Second Part of Morals
6. Applying Kant's Ethics: The Role of Anthropology
7. Anthropology from a Kantian Point of View: Toward a Cosmopolitan Conception of Human Nature
8. Making the Law Visible: The Role of Examples in
Kant's Ethics
PART III: EXTENSIONS OF ANTHROPOLOGY
9. Evil Everywhere: The Ordinariness of Kantian Radical Evil
10. "The Play of Nature:" Human Beings in Kant's Geography
11. Becoming Human: Kant and the Philosophy of Education
12. National Character via the Beautiful and
Sublime?
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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Robert B. Louden is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the University of Southern Maine. His publications include The World We Want (OUP 2007), Kant's Impure Ethics (OUP 2000), and Morality and Moral Theory (OUP 1992). Currently president of the North American Kant Society, his writings
focus on core issues and themes in ethical theory, the history of ethics, and Kant.
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