Global Limits: Immanuel Kant, International Relations, and Critique of World Politics

· State University of New York Press
4.3
3 reviews
eBook
265
Pages
Eligible

About this eBook

Global Limits challenges both the current proliferation of Kantian readings of international affairs and the theoretical foundation Kant is presumed to provide the discipline. By thoroughly examining Kant's writings on politics, history, and ethics within the context of his larger philosophical project, Franke demonstrates that Kant's approach to international politics flatly contradicts many of the debates on which the modern discipline of International Relations rests. Paying specific attention to Kant's philosophy of judgment and the geopolitical vision one may draw from it, Franke concludes that scholars must give up the universal limits offered by concepts such as the international, world, or global, in favor of a far less certain and much more open interpretive framework emphasizing the political.

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4.3
3 reviews

About the author

Mark F. N. Franke is Instructor of International Studies at the University of Northern British Columbia.

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