Kant: A Biography

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Notes to Pages 29—32 429


  1. Robert Forster and Elborg Forster, eds., European Society in the Eighteenth Cen¬
    tury (New York: Harper & Row, 1969), p. 232.

  2. Rink, Ansichten, p. 14. See also Herbert Sinz, Lexikon der Sitten und Gebräuche im
    Handwerk (Freiburg: Herder Verlag, 1986), p. 153: "There were drawn out con¬
    frontations between the saddle makers and the harness makers about the similarity
    of their tools and their trade." See also Otto Kettemann, "Sattler und Riemer,"
    in Reinhold Reith, ed., Lexikon des alten Handwerks. Vom Spätmittelalter bis ins 20.
    Jahrhundert (München: C. H. Beck, 1990), pp. 188-191. The dispute Kant de¬
    scribes was obviously part ofthat larger conflict. Fritz Gause, Die Geschichte der
    Stadt Königsberg in Preußen, I, Von der Gründung der Stadt bis zum letzten Kur¬
    fürsten (Köln/Graz: Böhlau Verlag, 1965), p. 533, points out that the saddle and
    harness makers had a twenty-five-year-long dispute about which parts of the har¬
    ness and other equipment for carriages were the work of which trade. The saddle
    makers also disputed the right of the harness makers to use certain (more fancy)
    kinds of leather (weißgegerbtes).

  3. Wolfram Fischer, Quellen zur Geschichte des deutschen Handwerks. Selbstzeugnisse
    seit der Reformationszeit (Göttingen: Musterschmidt Verlag, 1957), pp. 79-91.

  4. Kraus in Reicke, Kantiana, p. 5n.

  5. Borowski, Leben, p. 12; see also Jachmann, Kant, p. 135, who claimed that Kant
    often called his education a shield (Schutzwehr) of the heart and morals against
    wicked impressions (lasterhafte Eindrücke). Jachmann also called Kant's education
    both at home and at school "entirely Pietistic."

  6. Draft of a letter to Lindblom, Oct. 13, 1797 (Ak 13, p. 461; the letter itself: Ak 12,
    pp. 205-207). This is the only pronouncement on his parents written by Kant him¬
    self. It lends credibility to what others report. How important the moral standing
    of his family was to Kant can also be seen from a letter to the fiance of his brother's
    daughter of December 17, 1796 (Ak 12, p. 140), where he said: "Since the blood
    of my two esteemed parents in its different streams has never been sullied by any¬
    thing morally indecent, I hope that you will find this in your loved one.. ."

  7. Emil Arnoldt, "Kant's Jugend," in Emil Arnoldt, Gesammelte Schriften, 6 vols.,
    ed. Otto Schöndörffer (Berlin, 1907-1909), I, pp. 608-609. See also Stuckenberg,
    Kant, p. 6.

  8. Jachmann, Kant, p. 169. He also says that Kant's eyes were always filled with tears
    when he spoke of his mother, and that he called her "a loving, sensitive, devout,
    and righteous woman and a tender (zärtlich) mother who led her children to fear
    God through her devout teachings and virtuous example. She often took me out
    of the town and called attention to the works of God." See also Wasianski, Kant,
    pp. 25of.

  9. Wasianski, Kant, p. 246.

  10. Ak 7, p. 310. The words "enthusiastic" or "schwärmerisch" refer to highly emo¬
    tionalized religiosity, which was common in many Pietist groups, especially the
    Herrnhuter. It had a long history. John Locke had already argued against it in
    his Essay. See John Locke, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, edited with
    an introduction by P. H. Nidditch (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1975),
    pp. 697-706.

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