ARTICLES
No
Man Is an Island: Nature and Neo-Platonic
Ethics in Hayy Ibn Yaqzān Taneli
Kukkonen
[abstract]
Religion
in Hutcheson’s Moral Philosophy James
Harris [abstract] It is shown that belief in providence and
a future state are key components of Hutcheson’s account of moral
virtue. Though Hutcheson holds that human beings are naturally
virtuous, religion is necessary to give virtuous dispositions support
and stability. The aspects of Hutcheson’s moral psychology which lead
him to this conclusion are spelled out in detail. It is argued that
religion and virtue are connected in this way in both the Dublin
writings (the Inquiry and
the Essay) and the later
pedagogical texts, and that, therefore, there are reasons to question
claims made by James Moore to the effect that Hutcheson had two
distinct philosophical “systems.” Enlightenment
and Freedom Jonathan
Peterson [abstract] Race,
Difference, and Anthropology in Kant’s Cosmopolitanism Todd
Hedrick [abstract] Romantic
Cosmopolitanism: Novalis’s “Christianity or Europe” Pauline
Kleingeld [abstract] Between
Enlightenment and Romanticism: Some Problems and Challenges
in Gadamer’s Hermeneutics Kristin
Gjesdal [abstract] NOTES AND DISCUSSION Glasgow’s Conception of
Kantian Humanity Richard Dean [abstract]