The Reality of the Ideal: A Study of Kant's Highest Good
Immanuel Kant claimed that when we act on the moral law, we engage in a collective project to bring about a world that we can only grasp in reason. The resulting image of an ideal world, Kant called, the “highest good.” Since Kant's time, this ideal has challenged philosophical interpretation. What, after all, is its use, if (as Kant thought) the moral law is sufficient to determine how we should act? What is the highest good actually good for in everyday life? In contrast to standard readings, which see the highest good's main importance related to action, The Reality of the Ideal presents a fresh perspective according to which the highest good's primary importance is for certain moments of contemplation, both local and global in scope.

Englert posits that on one hand, it is important locally as a point of comparison that enables us to judge moral progress or degrees of morality (and its opposite) in experience. On the other hand, it becomes important globally as a point of reference in relation to which we can construct a harmonious worldview. In both instances, it ultimately serves as a perfect point of comparison for an imperfect world. These contemplative moments, in sum, show that the highest good is an ineliminable feature of experience, anchoring a deep sense of meaning of how the whole of experience might fit together coherently. Out of this analysis, it becomes clear that while not existing in a standard sense, the ideal is anything but a fiction.
1147084268
The Reality of the Ideal: A Study of Kant's Highest Good
Immanuel Kant claimed that when we act on the moral law, we engage in a collective project to bring about a world that we can only grasp in reason. The resulting image of an ideal world, Kant called, the “highest good.” Since Kant's time, this ideal has challenged philosophical interpretation. What, after all, is its use, if (as Kant thought) the moral law is sufficient to determine how we should act? What is the highest good actually good for in everyday life? In contrast to standard readings, which see the highest good's main importance related to action, The Reality of the Ideal presents a fresh perspective according to which the highest good's primary importance is for certain moments of contemplation, both local and global in scope.

Englert posits that on one hand, it is important locally as a point of comparison that enables us to judge moral progress or degrees of morality (and its opposite) in experience. On the other hand, it becomes important globally as a point of reference in relation to which we can construct a harmonious worldview. In both instances, it ultimately serves as a perfect point of comparison for an imperfect world. These contemplative moments, in sum, show that the highest good is an ineliminable feature of experience, anchoring a deep sense of meaning of how the whole of experience might fit together coherently. Out of this analysis, it becomes clear that while not existing in a standard sense, the ideal is anything but a fiction.
99.0 In Stock
The Reality of the Ideal: A Study of Kant's Highest Good

The Reality of the Ideal: A Study of Kant's Highest Good

by Alexander T. Englert
The Reality of the Ideal: A Study of Kant's Highest Good

The Reality of the Ideal: A Study of Kant's Highest Good

by Alexander T. Englert

Hardcover

$99.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    In stock. Ships in 3-7 days. Typically arrives in 3 weeks.
  • PICK UP IN STORE

    Your local store may have stock of this item.

Related collections and offers


Overview

Immanuel Kant claimed that when we act on the moral law, we engage in a collective project to bring about a world that we can only grasp in reason. The resulting image of an ideal world, Kant called, the “highest good.” Since Kant's time, this ideal has challenged philosophical interpretation. What, after all, is its use, if (as Kant thought) the moral law is sufficient to determine how we should act? What is the highest good actually good for in everyday life? In contrast to standard readings, which see the highest good's main importance related to action, The Reality of the Ideal presents a fresh perspective according to which the highest good's primary importance is for certain moments of contemplation, both local and global in scope.

Englert posits that on one hand, it is important locally as a point of comparison that enables us to judge moral progress or degrees of morality (and its opposite) in experience. On the other hand, it becomes important globally as a point of reference in relation to which we can construct a harmonious worldview. In both instances, it ultimately serves as a perfect point of comparison for an imperfect world. These contemplative moments, in sum, show that the highest good is an ineliminable feature of experience, anchoring a deep sense of meaning of how the whole of experience might fit together coherently. Out of this analysis, it becomes clear that while not existing in a standard sense, the ideal is anything but a fiction.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780197785997
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 09/02/2025
Pages: 344
Product dimensions: 6.50(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Alexander T. Englert is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of Richmond, Virginia. He is the author of many academic works in peer-reviewed journals, such as British Journal for the History of Philosophy, Inquiry, and Res Philosophica, as well as popular essays for Aeon magazine and The Immanent Frame.

Table of Contents

List of Abbreviations
Preface: Ode to the Highest Good
Introduction: The Highest Good in Contemplation

Part I Practical Ideals
1. Ideas Versus Ideals
2. Practical Ideals as Grounds of Contemplation
3. The Moral Epistemic Gap
4. Filling the Gap, Embracing the Ideal

Part II The Evolution of a Practical Ideal
5. A Mere Ideal Beyond Ends in Nature (1781-1786)
6. An Ideal as the Final End of the Will (1786-1788)
7. An Ideal as the Final End of the World (1790-1794)
Part III Ideals and the Construction of a Worldview
8. Kantian Coherence as a Contemplative Need
9. Constructing a Kantian Worldview
10. The Practical Power of a Kantian Worldview
Conclusion: The Reality of Kantian Ideals
Epilogue: End of the Endless

References
Index
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews