This book is the make it or break it for Kant. It will either tie everything together in a regulative bliss, or, as is evidenced by history, set the demand that reason progresses and solves its dualisms for Hegel. He almost did it.
The possibility of systematization of the philosophy of history is of critical importance to Kant due to the interstitial position it occupies for him between his theoretical and practical philosophy. Harmonizing these two domains works towards bridging what Kant terms the ‘chasm that separates the supersensible from the appearances’ , this is deemed the central project of his Crit J and as such is the place where the theoretical aspects of his philosophy of history are treated most extensively. Due to the scope of areas addressed by Kant’s philosophy of history however, a viable interpretation of how Kant conceives man’s ultimate vocation must be reconstructed from works across the entirety of his oeuvre . Thus the pragmatic anthropology plays a key role in providing a critical foundation for his philosophy of history in both practical and theoretical respects, demonstrating its possibility within the critical terms of Kant’s philosophical architectonic. To demonstrate the tenability of Kant’s philosophy of history the tensions which arise between his a-priori teleological claims concerning the ‘purposivity of history for rational beings, and his a-posteriori empirical studies in ‘practical anthropology’ which investigate natural conditions for human beings, must be mediated. This mediation as practical academic endeavour in Kant’s own work will be shown to find its highest conceptual expression in what he posits as the aim of the practical anthropology, the provision of an answer to the question ‘what is man?’ .
This book demonstrates how Kant’s pragmatic anthropology clarifies man’s relation to the intellectus archetypus in its status as an embodied discursive rational agent that has a vocation in history. First the anthropology demonstrates the epistemic status of a distinctively moral anthropology by alternating between physiological and practical perspectives. Then Kant utilizes this in providing an anthropology of our natural cognition in developing his ‘doctrine of prudence’. It is our continued attempt to effectively answer the question ‘what is man?’ throughout history that simultaneously defines what man is and explains the position of Kant’s philosophy of history in his architectonic.
2:0 Necessity of a Philosophy of History & Criticism
This section will outline why there is a case to be made against Kant’s ability to rationally justify the place of his philosophy of history as a supplement to his broader philosophical system. Due to its difficult position in his system but equal importance in demonstrating the coherence of it, Kant’s philosophy of history has been a popular point of departure for criticism of his philosophy. These criticisms, both contemporary and prominent in Kant’s own time, have often hinged on claims regarding the inability of the dualism in Kant’s system to account for the proper place of the free subject in nature. Historically, the overcoming of the impractical elements of this dualism by positing a new unity of reason based on a practical aesthetic or metaphysically holistic synthesis of these domains, were quickly found in Schiller and Herder respectively. The interest of these post-Kantian philosophers lay in the revision of Kant’s philosophy of history to provide satisfactory answers to prominent enlightenment debates regarding both our optimism towards the possibility of progress, and the metaphysic that motivated this progress. Although the assessment of post-Kantian philosophical systems lies outside the scope of this investigation, due to their internal development of Kant’s transcendental idealism, the criticisms levied by their authors remain informative in their treatment of Kant on his own terms. It is however the possibility of coherently reconstructing, and not radically revising his philosophy that is of interest here, and which will give testament to the tenability of his system as a whole.
Two contemporary reconstructions that deliver a negative verdict of Kant’s philosophy are thus considered here, that of Fackenheim and Yovel. The conclusions drawn from these two commentaries are each representative of one of the two broad categories the reception of Kant’s philosophy of history can be divided into. The first pertains the necessity of seeing the philosophy of history as extraneous to Kant’s system, this sees the exhaustive division between the realms of freedom and necessity in Kant’s system as proving fundamentally unbridgeable. Fackenheim argues along these lines in his 1996 paper Kant’s Concept of History, commenting: ‘few treat it seriously, for it seems unconnected, and indeed incompatible with the main body of his thought’ . The second, more radical approach present in the work of Yovel’s Kant and the Philosophy of History (1989) sees the tension between the demands of rationality and the cunning of nature in history as symptomatic of the dualisms pervasive in Kant’s system. He points here to the internal difficulties in Kants architectonic that disallow the possibility of a mediation between man’s empirical and rational history, a mediation that is necessary for a coherent philosophy of history. In simultaneously demonstrating the necessity and untenability of such a mediation for Kant, Yovel claims this leads to a ‘historical antimony’ within his system that cannot be resolved, and thus proves fatal.
Understanding both the ‘historical antimony’ that motivates Yovel’s critique and the dualisms that Fackenheim references, demands an understanding of the antimonies of reason Kant himself develops across his first two Critiques. To demotivate their claims, one of the central reasons for Kants development of his philosophy of history which finds its metaphysical motivation as a resolution of the antimony of practical reason, will thus first be outlined. He gives his most developed account of this in the sections §§82-83 contained in the final work of his critical writings, the Critique of the Power of Judgement; these crucial passages will be chronologically developed to outline his position (see Section 2.1-2.3). This will demonstrate how Kant argues for the capacity of the individual to act as a link which unifies the domains of freedom and nature, guided ultimately by a regulative ideal through the practical imperatives of the will that hold the highest good as their transcendent object. The criticisms given by Yovel and Fackenheim of Kant’s argument for this will then ultimately only serve to highlight the points in Kant’s theory where it is best supplemented by his practical anthropology.
2:1 End of Nature & Moral Teleology, Crit J §82 - Systematicity
“For the human being, […] he is the ultimate end of the creation here on earth, because he is the only being on earth who forms a concept of ends for himself and who by means of his reason can make a system of ends out of an aggregate of purposively formed things.”
This passage demonstrates a primary goal of Kant’s philosophy of history which is the ability to demonstrate that there is the possibility of a concrete synthesis ‘here on earth’ between our own ends and those we perceive of other ‘purposively formed things’. There is thus a rational ordering of final causes found in nature that develops towards a single end, an end which is ultimately subordinated to human reason or our own ‘concept’ of the highest good. Kant thereby makes reason the cornerstone of his architectonic, and as reason demands systematicity in its ordering of the world, an equal systematicity must be found in Kant’s system. It is the role of the philosophy of history to facilitate that systematicity in demonstrating our ability not only to theoretically cognize the highest good, but also practically will its material existence. As Kant maintains in his Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason the ‘final end of creation’ is the ‘kingdom of God on earth’ , thereby signifying that the transcendent ideal should be realised in empirical reality.
The synthesis referenced in this passage is thus a step Kant takes towards practical systematicity in drawing a crucial analogy between two conceptions of the supersensible which have been developed in the Crit J, but not yet interrelated. These two conceptions result as the resolutions of distinct antimonies, one developed in the Dialectic of Aesthetic Judgement and the other in the Dialectic of Teleological Judgement. These can be roughly distinguished between referring to our ‘inner-life’ in the case of the former, where the supersensible is referenced as the ‘substrate of humanity’ . And the latter as referring to our ability to theorize about the ‘outer’ world, in effect representing the supersensible that coheres mechanistic and teleological accounts of nature. Kant does maintain the self-sufficiency and autonomous validity of theoretical and practical reason in their respective domains of nature and freedom here; having carefully developed their workings in the first and second Critique. However, in developing a distinctly moral teleology he unifies their domains (and thus their supersensible substratum ) under what he here terms an ‘ultimate end’, thereby demonstrating the moral law of freedom to subsume the causal laws of nature. Progress in history is thus simultaneously progress in our outer and inner freedom, each requiring different things, but reciprocals in building towards the same end; this end is the highest good, or otherwise the regulative ideal of history.
2.2 The Highest Good as Regulative Ideal & Moral Theology, Crit J, §83 – Universalisation
“Now if that which is to be promoted as an end through the human being’s connection to nature is to be found within the human being himself, […] The first end of nature would be the happiness, the second the culture of the human being.”
Kant here outlines the two composite elements that constitute the highest good, these are merited happiness and our predisposition to virtue that can be universalised when embodied in human culture. As demonstrated in the previous section, Kant demands that the highest good is practically possible and not directed towards ‘empty imaginary ends’ ; the inclusion of the highest good as the ‘content’ of the will seems to confirm this, but it equally raises a paradox that Kant treats in the Dialectic of the Crit PrR (5:115). The paradox, or as it arises for Kant, the antimony, relates to the inherently dual nature of the moral will; on one hand it’s a-priori formal structure serves as an absolute condition of autonomy and is sufficient for determining ‘the good’, and on the other it demands a ‘total object’ upon which it acts, and therefore must consider empirical conditions for the pursuit of happiness. The relevance of a coherent resolution to both demands is clear for the philosophy of history; if an agent’s action is only determined by a formal law he becomes a passive agent of history merely reacting to its tides in desperate attempt at purity in freedom, and if it is merely an a-posteriori empirical affair he remains unfree and equally subject to natural law. The claims of universal progress further complicate the picture, for the object of the will should not only satisfy the aspect of our inherent ‘radical evil’ that demands immediate and individual happiness, but also include the universal consideration for the human ‘species’ in the form of culture. This corroborates Loudens claim that a full understanding of Kant’s moral philosophy demands recognition of an ‘impure ethics’ that equally considers empirical matters.
The problem of establishing a universal domain of right in history from the limited position of the individual, as it is treated extensively in Kant’s political essays , thus finds its explanatory philosophical counterpart in Kant’s critical system through his explication of the structure of the will . This structure can be developed from the synthetic relation between the two components of the highest good, happiness and virtue, these develop its two stages, the ‘unconditioned’ and the ‘whole’ . As developed in the Analytic of the Crit PrR virtue or the ‘good will’ is the absolute principle of the will and governs the universal principle of its legislation for rational beings; due to its determination in an a-priori fashion, it constitutes the ‘unconditioned’ aspect of the will. It is however our condition as rational finite beings that demands ‘happiness’ as the necessary consequent of virtue, and this is problematic as the two concepts although heterogenous in their supposed end ‘greatly restrict and infringe upon each other’ . It is the antimony of practical reason that arises here that motivates Kant to transcendentally deduce that the two concepts are synthetically related, thereby allowing him to raise the highest good to an unconditioned end. This means that the determination of the will maintains its universal validity and commitment to autonomy, this because its efficient cause is not natural causality but instead a relation to the supersensible. In the terms of Kant’s philosophy of history this means the individual agent’s morality is not determined by his immediate empirical conditions, or otherwise the content of the will is not contingent but necessary, and functions not as the ground of action but instead as its regulative ideal.
This last aspect relates to the moral theology introduced in the dialectic of practical reason, this demands the practical postulation of both the existence of God and our immortality. The dictum of the ‘primacy of practical reason’ which motivates it gives a rationally necessary objective reality to the Ideas of freedom, God, and the soul when we cognize an object theoretically by means of the understanding. It thereby reconceives the highest good as an object of hope, a hope that in following the moral law when acting upon the object of our will the highest good as an end can be attained . It hereby fulfils a basic maxim of the Kantian system which is that ought (sollen) is meaningless without can (können), Kant hereby confirms the possibility of the attainment of an ethical community, albeit in the afterlife. However, the practical necessity of these Ideas does not yet qualify them as teleologically meaningful, in making a transcendent concept of God immanent to practical reason Kant has not yet proved its reality. The analogies thus drawn between our theoretical and practical faculties, or otherwise our separate cognition of freedom and nature, must share a systematic teleological interest embodied in reason itself.
2.3 Systematic Unity of Reason, Crit J, General Remark on the Teleology - Necessity
‘Theology also leads immediately to religion, i.e., to the recognition of our duties as divine commands, since the cognition of our duty and the final end which is therein imposed upon us by reason is what could first produce the determinate concept of God, […] by means of a soundproof rather than an arbitrary interpolation’
It is the ‘soundproof’ rather than an ‘arbitrary interpolation’ of the systematic relation of the ends of reason in its respective domains of freedom and nature that is provided by the Crit J in the form of a theological proof that combines Kant’s moral theology and moral teleology outlined in sections 2.1 and 2.2. The challenge of a conflict between our desire for happiness and the dutiful fulfilment of acts in accordance with the highest good for Kant’s philosophy of history was resolved in the Crit PrR by the practical postulation of the existence of God. As Yovel accuses however, this limits Kant’s explication of the purposive development of the inner and outer domains of reason to a mere ‘subjective encouragement’ , reason therefore lacks a systematic unity remaining opposed to itself through its dualism. With the principle of purposivity as it is introduced by the faculty of judgement in the Crit J Kant reconfigures the idea of duties as motivated by ‘divine possibility’ to duties as ‘divine commands’. Reason itself should be conceived here as making this ‘command’, not merely playing a regulative role but instead manifesting its purposivity in nature according to its own ends.
Kant’s philosophy of history is hereby supplied with a supportive ground that is a logical consequence of what he developed in the Analytic of Teleological Judgement; it is now however applied to reason itself. If theoretical reason must necessarily cognize the parts of its objects as having an internal purposivity, then when reflecting on itself as an object whilst setting its own ends, the respective parts of the faculty of reason, namely practical and theoretical, must also necessarily be unified in their ends.