1st Edition
When Metaphysics Meets Biology Kantian Approaches to the Concept of Organism
Preface Phillip R. Sloan
Introduction
Part 1: The Emergence of a Science of Life and the Kantian Interest in the Philosophical Problem of Life Before the Third Critique
1. First Conditions for the Concept of Organism. Disruptions: Leibniz, Stahl, and the Critiques of Mechanism
2. Second Condition for the Concept of Organism. Vital Properties and Vitalism: The Animal Economy Model
3. Kant’s Critique of Leibniz, and the Order Issue in the Only Possible Argument...
4. Vital Forces and Epigenesis
Part 2: Meeting Purposiveness: The Idea of Critical Philosophy and the Claims of a Science of Life
5. Order and Life in the Appendix to the Transcendental Dialectic
6. The Problem of Species and Variations in the Transformation of Natural History: Kant’s Encounter with the Teleological Question in Biology
7. Life, Soul, and Body (again)
8. The Critical Elucidation of Purposiveness in the Critique of the Power of Judgement: The Lawfulness of the Contingent as Such
Part 3: Kant’s Theory of ‘Organism’ and its (Biological and Metaphysical) Implications
9. Kant’s Account of the Organism in the Critique of the Power of Judgement
10. Use of Reflective Teleology: Original Organization, Milieu, and Type
11. The Two Great Laws of Biology and the Parting of the Kantian Ways
12. The Naturalization of Purposiveness and the Critique of Contingency
Conclusion
Biography
Philippe Huneman is a philosopher of science Research Director at the Institut d’Histoire et de Philosophie des Sciences et des Techniques (CNRS/Université Paris I Sorbonne). He authored Why? The Philosophy behind the Question (2023), Death: Perspectives from the Philosophy of Biology (2023), and Profiling: How Predictive Algorithms Shape Identity and the Social Fabric (2025).






