1st Edition
Kant and the Scottish Enlightenment
Introduction Manfred Kuehn
1. Hutcheson on the Unity of Virtue and Right Aaron Garrett
2. Hutcheson and Kant: Moral Sense and Moral Feeling Michael Walschots
3. Hutcheson’s and Kant’s Critique of Sympathy Wiebke Deimling
4. Kant and Hutcheson on Aesthetic and Teleology Reed Winegar
5. Outer Sense, Inner Sense, and Feeling: Hutcheson and Kant on Aesthetic Pleasure Colin McQuillan
6. Taste, Morality, and Common Sense: Kant and the Scots Paul Guyer
7. Kant and Hume on Feelings in Moral Philosophy Oliver Sensen
8. Hume’s Principle and Kant’s Pure Rational System of Religion: Grace, Providence and the Highest Good Lawrence Pasternack
9. A Writer More Excellent than Cicero: Hume’s Influence on Kant’s Anthropology Robert B. Louden
10. Kant and Hume on Marriage Elizabeth Robinson
11. Hume and Kant on Imagination: Thematic and Methodological Differences Frank Schalow
12. Hume and Kant on Space, Divisibility, and Antinomical Conflict Bryan Hall
13. Hume and Kant on Identity and Substance Mark Pickering
14. An Alternative to Heteronomy and Anarchy: Kant’s Reformulation of the Social Contract Alexander Schafer
15. Kant, Smith, and the Place of Virtue in Political and Economic Organization JP Messina
16. Adam Smith's Kantian Phenomenology of Moral Motivation John McHugh
17. Kant and Smith on Imagination, Reason, and Personhood Jack Russell Weinstein
18. Seeing a Flower in the Garden: Common Sense, Transcendental Idealism Scott Stapleford
19. Kant’s Heuristic Methods: Feeling and Common Sense in Orientation and Taste Brigitte Sassen
Biography
Elizabeth Robinson is an assistant professor of philosophy at Nazareth College in Rochester, NY. Her research primarily considers early modern philosophy with a focus on Hume and Kant.
Chris W. Surprenant is an associate professor of philosophy at the University of New Orleans, where he directs the Alexis de Tocqueville Project in Law, Liberty, and Morality. He is the author of Kant and the Cultivation of Virtue (Routledge 2014).






