Notes to Pages 144—151 461
Chapter 4: A Palingenesis and Its Consequences (1764-1769)
- Ak 7 (Anthropologie), p. 201.
- Ak 7, p. 294.
- Ak 7, 294^; compare Ak 25.1 (Antropologie Collins), p. 150.
- Ak 25.1 (Anthropologie Friedländer), p. 629; see also p. 353.
- Ak 25.1 (Anthropologie Friedländer), p. 523.
- Ak 25.1 (Anthropologie Friedländer), p. 617.
- Henry Allison, Kant's Theory of Freedom (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1990), p. 136. Allison does not endorse this view - See also Ak 9, p. 475.
- Ak 25.2 (Anthropologie Pillau), p. 822.
- Ak 25.2 (Anthropologie Mrongovius), p. 1385.
- Borowski, Leben, p. 71.
- See Lehmann, "Kants Lebenskrise," pp. 411-421. Lehmann argues that Kant
underwent such a "life crisis" in 1764. He takes the "Observations on the Feeling
of the Beautiful and Sublime" as an indication of it, but he sees it entirely in the¬
oretical terms, wanting to understand his "Denkkrisen als Lebenskrisen''' (p. 412).
This is too one-sided. - Hamann, Briefwechsel, II, pp. 82, 119. This fallow period lasted until the end of
his life. Hamann, who was very interested in Kypke's library and manuscripts
during 1779-80, found nothing of significance in his literary remains. - Immanuel Kant, Religion and Rational Theology, tr. and ed. Allan W. Wood and
George DiGiovanni (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), pp. 277f
(Ak 7, pp. 5sf). - Kant, Religion and Rational Theology, p. 280 (Ak 7, p. 59). Compare p. 367, this
volume. - Kant, Religion and Rational Theology, p. 280 (Ak 7, p. 58).
- Ak 25.2 (Menschenkunde), p. 1174.
- It is all-too-often forgotten that for the ancient philosophers, philosophy was more
a "way of life," akin to "religion," than a theoretical pursuit in our sense of the
term. See Pierre Hadot, Philosophy as a Way of Life, tr. A. I. Davidson (London:
Blackwell, 1995); see also Martha C. Nussbaum, The Therapy of Desire: Theory and
Practice in Hellenistic Ethics (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1994), espe¬
cially pp. 383^ - Plato, Republic, 604E.
- Ak 7, p. 104, emphasis supplied.
- In his draft for the Dispute of the Faculties, he said: "I formulated rules for myself
early on," attributing his long life to these rules (Ak 23, p. 463). - See "Insanity," in John W. Yolton et al. (eds.), The Blackwell Companion to the En¬
lightenment (Cambridge, Mass: Blackwell Publishers, 1991). See also Böhme and
Böhme, Das Andere der Vernunft, pp. 389^ True to form, the Böhmes claim that
hypochondria "is a product of the Enlightenment." In particular, "the denial of
affects, the discipline of the body, and the thorough intellectualization of the
entire world (Dasein) led to a deep malfunctioning of the immediate bodily exis¬
tence" (p. 419). Kant's hypochondria is the result of his rationalism. This is false.