![]() ![]() ![]() On the one hand, he’s keen to approach them, to map out the limits from within by doing as much as possibly can be done through the exercise of reason but he’s also interested in stepping up a level and looking at them from above, asking questions of principle about where these limits are to be drawn and what might lie beyond them. He’s interested in these limits in various different senses. This is Kant’s masterpiece…He’s interested in the limits to what we can know he’s interested in the limits to what we can use pure reason to ascertain he’s interested in the limits to what we can even think about. “This is the greatest philosophical book of all time. ![]() Foreign Policy & International Relations. ![]()
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