I filosofové mají svůj chiliasmus

Title: I filosofové mají svůj chiliasmus
Variant title:
  • Even philosophers have their chiliasm
Source document: Studia philosophica. 2010, vol. 57, iss. 2, pp. [101]-104
Extent
[101]-104
  • ISSN
    1803-7445 (print)
    2336-453X (online)
Type: Article
Language
License: Not specified license
 

Notice: These citations are automatically created and might not follow citation rules properly.

Abstract(s)
A translation of Kant's work Ende aller Dinge (The End of All Things) from 1794, one of his polemical religious-philosophical works, has been published in Czech for the first time. It enables readers to meet one of the typical expressions of Kant's post-critical philosophy (besides his works on philosophy of history, anthropology and political philosophy). The work clearly shows Kant's dissatisfaction with contemporary understanding of the pláce of religion in society, and shows why the author got into conflict with clerical and political power of the time. The translation is introduced by a brief outline of the historical context of Kant's work, its place in the framework of the philosopher's work and its refiection among Kant's contemporaries, which resulted in an official ban imposed on Kant's works and lectures related to religion by Friedrich Wilhelm II.