Description
Olga Lenczewska provides a comprehensive analysis of Immanuel Kant’s practical reason, focusing on its historical development and evolution. This work traces how Kant’s moral philosophy and understanding of rational agency developed across his major writings, from his early works through the Critique of Practical Reason and beyond.
The book examines key concepts including autonomy, duty, and the categorical imperative, exploring how Kant refined and clarified these ideas throughout his philosophical career. Lenczewska demonstrates the interconnections between Kant’s theoretical and practical philosophy, showing how his evolving epistemology influenced his ethics.
Part of the Elements in the Philosophy of Immanuel Kant series, this volume offers both scholars and advanced students a detailed investigation into one of philosophy’s most influential moral theories and its intellectual foundations.







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