Kant's Perpetual Peace and Its Hidden Sources: A Textual Approach |
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Authors: | William Ossipow |
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Affiliation: | 1. University of Geneva;2. William Ossipow is Professor of Political Theory at the Department of Political Science, University of Geneva. His research interests include: history and geo‐dynamics of ideas, analysis of ideologies, religions as political institutions, problems of ethics and of justice related to nation‐states, human rights. He has recently directed and contributed to books on racism and liberalism and on Israel. |
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Abstract: | The problem of Kantâ‐?s sources in Perpetual Peace has never before been dealt with in a systematic fashion. As some commentators have already noticed, Kant seldom quotes his sources in Perpetual Peace and in quite a number of other works. The purpose of the present research note is to analyze the Kantian text and to find philological traces of the various authors that we believe have been important to Kantâ‐?s work in the field of political philosophy. With this in mind, a methodology has been elaborated which includes three aspects: a textual and comparative analysis, a consistency analysis and a contextual analysis. These three approaches combined should allow us to systematically shed light on the key role played by Emer de Vattelâ‐?s famous book The Law of Nations (1758) and, more unexpectedly, by the Federalist Papers, in particular articles No. 10, 14 and 51 written by Madison. |
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Keywords: | Kant Perpetual Peace Vattel Madison Textual methodology |
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