Article ID: CBB685336938

The Metaphor of Epigenesis: Kant, Blumenbach and Herder (2016)

unapi

Over the last few decades, the meaning of the scientific theory of epigenesis and its significance for Kant's critical philosophy have become increasingly central questions. Most recently, scholars have argued that epigenesis is a key factor in the development of Kant's understanding of reason as self-grounding and self-generating. Building on this work, our claim is that Kant appealed to not just any epigenetic theory, but specifically Johann Friedrich Blumenbach's account of generation, and that this appeal must be understood not only in terms of self-organization, but also in terms of the demarcation of a specific domain of inquiry: for Blumenbach, the study of life; for Kant, the study of reason. We argue that Kant adopted this specific epigenetic model as a result of his dispute with Herder regarding the independence of reason from nature. Blumenbach's conception of epigenesis and his separation of a domain of the living from the non-living lent Kant the tools to demarcate metaphysics, and to guard reason against Herder's attempts to naturalize it.

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Article Gaukroger, Stephen W.; Dalia Nassar (2016) Introduction: Kant and the Empirical Sciences. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science (pp. 55-56). unapi

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Authors & Contributors
Zammito, John H.
Nassar, Dalia
Michael J. Olson
Brogan, Walter
Feigenbaum, Ryan William
Goldstein, Amanda Jo
Journals
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Herder Jahrbuch
Intellectual History Review
Publishers
University of Chicago Press
Villanova University
Steiner
Oxford University Press
Cambridge University Press
Concepts
Life sciences
Biology
Mechanism; mechanical philosophy
Teleology
Natural science
Epigenesis
People
Kant, Immanuel
Herder, Johann Gottfried
Blumenbach, Johann Friedrich
Lamarck, Jean Baptiste Antoine Pierre de Monet de
Shelley, Percy Bysshe
Münter, Gustav Wilhelm
Time Periods
18th century
19th century
Enlightenment
Places
Germany
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