Description
Kant on Language offers a comprehensive exploration of one of the most overlooked aspects of Immanuel Kant’s philosophical system. While Kant’s contributions to epistemology, metaphysics, and aesthetics are well-documented, his theories about language have received comparatively little scholarly attention. This volume, edited by Luigi Filieri and Konstantin Pollok, brings together leading international experts to examine how linguistic considerations permeate Kant’s critical philosophy.
The contributors investigate the relationship between language and thought in Kant’s work, analyzing how language functions in his transcendental idealism, his theory of concepts, and his aesthetics of beauty and the sublime. The book addresses fundamental questions about the nature of linguistic meaning, the limits of language in expressing ideas, and the role of communication in Kant’s critical project. These essays reveal that language is far more central to understanding Kant’s philosophy than previously recognized.







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