1st Edition
Kant’s Early Followers in Political Philosophy
Introduction Reidar Maliks and Elisabeth Theresia Widmer
1. Johann Adam Bergk on Democracy Reidar Maliks
2. Kant and Schlegel on Majority Rule Mike Gregory
3. Fichte’s Incomplete Republicanism J. Colin Bradley
4. Saul Ascher’s Misgivings About Kant’s Political Theology Wojciech Kozyra
5. Karolina on Confining Women to Domestic Labor and Private Reason Olga Lenczewska
6. Ewald and Tieftrunk on Volksaufklärung Feroz Mehmood Shah
7. Government or Citizens? Kant and Johann Adam Bergk on Constitutional Patriotism Takuya Saito
8. Johann Benjamin Erhard’s Critical Account of State Legitimacy Elisabeth Theresia Widmer
9. Johann Heinrich Tieftrunk on How Best to Prevent and Heal Revolutions Valentin Braekman
10. Dictatorship and Insurrection in Schlegel’s Republicanism Fiorella Tomassini
11. Fichte contra Rehberg on the Origin of the Aristocracy and Feudal Inequality Mike Kryluk
Biography
Reidar Maliks is a professor of philosophy at the University of Oslo. Among his publications are Kant’s Politics in Context (2014) and Kant and the French Revolution (2022).
Elisabeth Theresia Widmer is a postdoctoral researcher at the London School of Economics. She has published several articles on left-Kantian thinkers, and a monograph titled Left-Kantianism in the Marburg School (2023).
“Recent decades have seen renewed interest in Kant’s political philosophy, but this is hardly the first wave of such interest. This groundbreaking volume includes philosophically sophisticated and historically sensitive essays on Kant’s earlier followers in political philosophy, examining the ways in which Kantian themes were taken up and modified. Many of these thinkers bring tensions in Kant’s views into sharper focus, as well as pointing the way to new directions in which the same issues might be taken in the future.”
Arthur Ripstein, University of Toronto, Canada






