The Life and Philosophy of Immanuel Kant

by Filippov, Mikhail Mikhailovich
ISBN: 9798274392211
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Overview

The present volume offers one of the earliest and most comprehensive portraits of Immanuel Kant, written by Mikhail Mikhailovich Filippov, a Russian philosopher, historian of ideas, and literary scholar whose intellectual curiosity bridged the late nineteenth century's growing dialogue between Western European and Russian thought.

First published in the final decades of Imperial Russia, Filippov's study belongs to a tradition of Russian philosophical biographies that sought to make the great systems of European philosophy accessible to a wider educated audience. His book on Kant combines historical narration, biographical detail, and systematic exposition. Filippov was not content merely to summarize; his aim was interpretive and evaluative. Through a transparent, often elegant prose, he traced the evolution of Kant's mind from the modest home of a Pietist craftsman in Königsberg to the heights of the Critique of Pure Reason, and finally to the serene, stoic old age of the philosopher who redefined the boundaries of human knowledge and morality.

Filippov wrote during a period when Kant's influence in Russia was undergoing a revival. Translations of the Critiques and the writings of neo-Kantians were circulating widely, while intellectuals sought a philosophical foundation to reconcile faith, science, and moral life. Within this context, Filippov's Kant appeared not merely as a biography, but as a concise introduction to the critical philosophy for readers who may have found Kant's own works dauntingly abstract. His tone is lucid and didactic, yet always respectful of the thinker's depth.

What distinguishes Filippov's treatment is its balance between biography and doctrine. The first half of the book paints an intimate picture of Kant's daily routine, his ascetic discipline, and his moral character. Filippov sees in Kant's life the embodiment of his philosophy - the harmony of duty, order, and freedom. The later chapters unfold the structure of the critical system: the revolution of human knowledge through the discovery of the synthetic a priori, the doctrine of space and time as forms of sensibility, the distinction between phenomena and noumena, and the reconciliation of freedom and necessity through the moral law. Filippov explains these ideas in clear, narrative language, linking them to the living man who conceived them.

Mikhail Filippov himself was a versatile figure of Russian intellectual life. Trained in philosophy and philology, he contributed to journals such as Vestnik Evropy and Russkaya Mysl, translated and commented on major European thinkers, and wrote studies on Nietzsche, Fichte, and the development of modern philosophy. His works belong to that generation of Russian scholars who brought systematic Western philosophy into Russian culture before the Revolution. Though Filippov did not found a school, his writings anticipated later efforts to present philosophy as both science and art, as the self-consciousness of human civilization.

This book remains a vivid testimony to that mission. It unites critical precision with a humanistic vision: to show that the highest achievements of reason emerge not in abstraction alone, but in the moral and personal struggle of a man devoted to truth. Filippov's Kant is not an austere recluse, but a model of intellectual integrity - a man who sought to place the laws of reason and the dignity of duty above all transient interests, and whose example still commands admiration more than two centuries later.

  • Format: Trade Paperback
  • Author: Filippov, Mikhail Mikhailovich
  • ISBN: 9798274392211
  • Condition: Used
  • Dimensions: 8.00 x 0.32
  • Number Of Pages: 150
  • Publication Year: 2025
Language: English