Kant and Hegel: how an objection becomes proof

Autores/as

  • Angelo CICATELLO Università degli Studi di Palermo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36311/2318-0501/2024.v12n1.p123

Palabras clave:

Kant, Hegel, Ontological Proof

Resumen

In many circumstances the attacks of detractors have played a greater role in fostering the vitality of the ontological proof than the strenuous defence of its supporters. What is most surprising, however, is that that certain critiques have unwittingly become arguments containing an original reformulation of the ontological proof. The singular phenomenon of the trasformation
of an objection into proof is precisely what we intend to consider in this essay, tracing a path that leads from Kant, the author of the objection on which we will focus most, to Hegel

Biografía del autor/a

  • Angelo CICATELLO, Università degli Studi di Palermo

    Angelo Cicatello teaches Theoretical Philosophy at the University of Palermo. As a researcher on Kant and German classical philosophy, he has also taken an interest in the themes of Classical Critical Theory and developments of ontological-metaphysical problems within contemporary reflection. He is the author of the volumes Dialettica negativa e logica della parvenza. Saggio su Th. W. Adorno (2001), Soggettività e trascendenza. Da Kant a Heidegger (2005), Ontologia critica e metafisica. Studio su Kant (2011),
    Ragione umana e forma del mondo. Saggi su Kant (2023)

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Publicado

2024-07-15

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Cómo citar

Kant and Hegel: how an objection becomes proof. (2024). Estudios Kantianos [EK], 12(1), 123. https://doi.org/10.36311/2318-0501/2024.v12n1.p123