Kant in 90 Minutes by Paul Strathern
Excellent
This is another book in a series of authors explained in ninety minutes, with great skill, by a wonderful author.
Kant has always been an epitome of high thinking, representing the power of human thought to produce works of genius.
The flip side is that Kant has also signified a barrier that I would never pass, being unable to get anywhere close to understanding him.
In fact, it is not even a question of understanding, for I could not even write a page of his work, although I tried.
To put it into perspective, perhaps I could have done better had I tried and there is also the issue of training.
In high school, instead of being given an introduction to philosophy in an honest way, we were actually indoctrinated.
Whatever opposed the Marxist doctrine was wrong and wherever there were statements that could be used for the communist purpose, the philosopher in question was named a precursor of the “great” Marx.
So I have always regretted that instead of having at least some summary education that would help, I was actually sent on the wrong path.
Kant is too complex to be read and understood easily, and I found solace in this book- and others- finding how difficult the philosopher is for most people.
When he gave his manuscript to a cousin, that one returned it and said that he had to stop half way through:
- I feared for my sanity and I stopped
As Paul Strathern says, it is quite an achievement that the relative has reached that far in the book, without fear.
Even if the subject and the hero of this very good book are very serious, the tone is at times light, with even a few jokes
A quote from The Critique of Pure Reason is first given in English, then in Italian, where it may sound better.
Even with Italian, there is a feeling that the meaning would be very hard to grasp and the writing appears hermetic.
But Paul Strathern writes:
- You do not want to hear it in German
Kant was an intriguing man, whose life appeared to have been very ordinary, without any exceptional event.
Again, as the author puts it- all that happened to Immanuel Kant, did not take place in the exterior world, but inside his mind.
And what a mind!
Kant had a very precise routine, and people could set their watches according to his afternoon walk, taking place every day at three thirty.
He even turned down an invitation to teach at the prestigious University of Berlin, on account of his dislike for travelling.
One concept that has attracted my attention is the Categorical imperative, whereby we would need to act not according to feelings or emotions, but based on duty.
We would all need to do something having in mind that that act would be performed by all humanity in the same way.
Kant believed that lying is not permitted and had qualms about the habitual ending of letters that provided for:
- Your devoted servant
Paul Strathern is ironic when he mentions an instance when Kant reneged somehow on a promise he had made to the emperor.
The book is excellent.