Amabel Crowe | University of Edinburgh (original) (raw)
Address: Edinburgh, Edinburgh, City of, United Kingdom
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London School of Economics and Political Science
CSIC (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas-Spanish National Research Council)
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Papers by Amabel Crowe
Can political revolutions be legitimate, according to Kant? Kant"s writing on the legitimacy of r... more Can political revolutions be legitimate, according to Kant? Kant"s writing on the legitimacy of revolutions has resulted in allegations of inconsistency and contradiction 1 . Kant was sympathetic with the French Revolution, which occurred in the middle of his career as a philosopher and civil servant of the Prussian state. He was a committed egalitarian, and in favour of a republican form of government 2 , he therefore perceived that the Revolution could potentially represent an exciting leap forward in the progress of humanity 3 . However, unlike his contemporary Edmund Burke 4 , Kant was not interested in passing judgment on the events of 1789 specifically; rather more he was concerned to develop a general theory of how morality related to politics. This theory consistently stated that revolutions were morally and politically unjustifiable 5 .
To what extent is historical writing limited by a narrative mode of representation?
Can political revolutions be legitimate, according to Kant? Kant"s writing on the legitimacy of r... more Can political revolutions be legitimate, according to Kant? Kant"s writing on the legitimacy of revolutions has resulted in allegations of inconsistency and contradiction 1 . Kant was sympathetic with the French Revolution, which occurred in the middle of his career as a philosopher and civil servant of the Prussian state. He was a committed egalitarian, and in favour of a republican form of government 2 , he therefore perceived that the Revolution could potentially represent an exciting leap forward in the progress of humanity 3 . However, unlike his contemporary Edmund Burke 4 , Kant was not interested in passing judgment on the events of 1789 specifically; rather more he was concerned to develop a general theory of how morality related to politics. This theory consistently stated that revolutions were morally and politically unjustifiable 5 .
To what extent is historical writing limited by a narrative mode of representation?