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Con-textos Kantianos: International Journal of Philosophy, ISSN-e 2386-7655, Nº. 15, 2022, págs. 353-357
Kant's account of emotions has only recently begun to receive the attention that this topic deserves, as it casts new light over the manifold features of transcendental philosophy. The authors expand the contemporary overview of the Kantian treatment from both a neuroscientific and a continental philosophical perspective. The volume opens paths to reevaluate neglected aspects of the Kantian model of human rationality.
Tuning the Human Mind: The Contemporaneity of Kant’s Account of Emotions
págs. 1-7
Kant’s Emotional Normativity and the Embodiment of Reason: Interests, Reflection and Feelings
págs. 9-24
Unpacking Moral Feeling: Kantian Clues to a Map of the Moral World
págs. 25-44
Edenic Animality, Self-Sustenance, Loving and Dying: Corporeal Biological Needs and Emotions in Kant
págs. 45-54
Kant and the "True Shame Instinct": Notes on the Future of the Human Species
págs. 55-68
págs. 69-85
págs. 87-106
Exemplary Emotions: A Discussion of Normativity in Kant’s Aesthetic Judgment
págs. 107-120
An Emotion That Seems to Be No Play: Deleuze on Kantian Sublime
págs. 121-137
The Ambiguity of Kantian Emotions: Philosophical, Biological and Neuroscientific Implications
págs. 139-154
Calibration Hypothesis: Rethinking Kant’s Place for Emotion and the Brain’s Resting State
págs. 155-170
págs. 171-184
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