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Автор Cavallar, Georg
Дата выпуска 2006
dc.description In her essay (in Kantian Review 10 (2005), 82–111), Shell wants to demonstrate that 1. Kant's theory of the right of nations ‘can furnish us with some much needed practical help and guidance’, and 2. ‘Kant is less averse to the use of force, including resort to pre-emptive war… than he is often taken to be’ (p. 82). The first claim is unconvincing. The second one is in need of clarification. Shell turns Kant into a kind of realist and just-war theorist, into a liberal who is prejudiced against illiberal regimes. In the end, her Kant is closer to Locke, Vattel and other early liberal international lawyers than to himself. Almost all that is unique in Kant's theory of the right of nations gets lost. In this, Shell follows a general trend among some Kant interpreters: the interpretation is only loosely based on Kant; it claims to follow his ‘spirit’ and offers creative ‘Kantian perspectives’. Amidst interpretational creativity, Kant's texts more or less disappear in the mist.
Формат application.pdf
Издатель Cambridge University Press
Копирайт Copyright © Kantian Review 2006
Название Commentary on Susan Meld Shell's ‘Kant on Just War and “Unjust Enemies”: Reflections on a “Pleonasm“’
Тип article-commentary
DOI 10.1017/S1369415400002272
Electronic ISSN 2044-2394
Print ISSN 1369-4154
Журнал Kantian Review
Том 11
Первая страница 117
Последняя страница 124
Аффилиация Cavallar Georg; Vienna University

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