Kant's Critique of Pure Reason

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A lecture series examining Kant's Critique of Pure Reason. This series looks at German Philosopher Immanuel Kant's seminal philosophical work 'The Critique of Pure Reason'. The lectures aim to outline and discuss some of the key philosophical issues raised in the book and to offer students and individuals thought provoking Kantian ideas surrounding metaphysics. Each lecture looks at particular questions raised in the work such as how do we know what we know and how do we find out about the world, dissects these questions with reference to Kant's work and discusses the broader philosophical implications. Anyone with an interest in Kant and philosophy will find these lectures thought provoking but accessible.

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  • Alexander@1234.
    About
    This is a fantastic lecture series on the fundamental philosophy of Immanuel Kant. Someone said that the good parts of the lecture were sparse but I have to disagree. Although it does take some thought and careful dissection; I feel that the brilliance of Immanuel Kant’s philosophy can be extracted from nearly every statement made throughout the lectures.
  • Jill Lloyd Flanagan
    Enormously refreshing and entertaining lectures on Kant
    These lectures on Kant are a lot of fun and great for reminding you of the fundamentals if you’ve studied him. I’m not sure how good they would be as an introduction but they are very entertaining at any rate
  • tentdweller26
    Good lectures
    Low reviews are being a little excessive in my opinion. These are very enjoyable and useful lectures. As others have noted though it does not stand alone. I recommend as a companion for dedicated study of the first critique.
  • Darth Brosephus
    A series on Locke, Hume, and Reid, with Kantian digressions interspersed
    There are moments of brilliance throughout this 8 week lecture series, but they are certainly sparse and scattered throughout the professor’s presentations in a seemingly unorganized fashion. If you are looking for a clear, thorough, and unbiased engagement with the CPR, this series might not be for you. The bias, as many have pointed out below, is that the professor is an unapologetic realist. If you are looking for a academic engagement with the CPR, there does exist such a series offered by the University of Glasgow here on the podcast app. I profited greatly from the series a couple of years ago during the initial phases of my Master’s thesis. If you are looking for a series that very generally walks through the main themes of the CPR, then you can rest assured that this series does an adequate job. Keep in mind that it is an 8 weeks series, and for that reason it is more topical than academic. It really seems to be a series designed for graduate philosophy students to obtain, or refresh, their familiarity with Kant’s project and its historical placement. The main themes if the CPR are covered, and the listener is left with a very basic understanding of Kant’s general project. Scattered throughout the series there are interesting digressions into Locke, Hume, and Reid, which provides a relevant backdrop for Kant’s project, and somewhat paints, in broad strokes, the philosophical climate of the day. Considering the 8 week time constraint of this series, and taking into account the original audience that this lecture series was crafted for, the series is fine. Do not judge it outside of this context. Oxford has been kind enough to share this with the public. However, it is definitely a series that I play in the car on the way to the office, and not a series that I sit listening to intently, pen-in-hand, to advance my understanding of Kant. As a brief aside, if you are unfamiliar with Aristotle’s basic acts of mind, unfamiliar with John Locke and David Hume, and unfamiliar with Kant’s basic jargon...good luck. This series does not elucidate Kant’s jargon par excellence, but swashes it around in a fashion that often leaves little clarity as to what is being said in detail. Again, there are moments of pure brilliance and insight, but they are buried within random digressions that are interesting, usually obscure, and only sometimes relevant. If you really want to grasp the CPR deeper, get a copy of the CPR—Norman Kemp Smith translation is very good—and a commentary, and then go listen to the University of Glasgow series.
  • jdjdjdnsjd
    Pretentiousness
    Robinson is insufferably pretentious. It is easy to imagine that the primary question always at the back of his mind is not “how best shall I explain Kant?”, but rather, “how can I best come across as an educated patrician, and not a mere commoner?” I suspect this motivation affects all aspects of his life. He is a zealous Aristotelian, claiming he died in such-and-such year with Aristotle (I laughed out loud), and making the appallingly ignorant claim that Aristotle “invented metaphysics.” I listened to this because I wanted to refresh my understanding of Kant. In between his incredibly cringe-worthy effort to come across as refined, he does an acceptable job of presenting Kant’s ideas (you can find more in-depth criticisms of his methods elsewhere in these reviews). If you are not turned off by his unbelievably artificial personality, there are really no other podcast options that cover Kant’s metaphysics in as much depth.
  • messmer777
    Avoid
    This lecturer is a pompous reactionary windbag who early on admits that he “died” in 323BC with Aristotle. Insufferable.
  • Mr. Podcast1234
    Mixed
    Pro’s: Robinson does a pretty good job clarifying extremely dense and often muddy Kant jargon. He doesn’t usually provide multiple interpretations or kinds of explanations, but he does hammer away at the summaries he does provide. He’s also pretty good at providing early modern context, and I think he speaks German. He’s certainly committed to the material. Cons: Robinson is an ideologue not a real philosopher. He either isn’t interested in or is incapable of providing the strongest version of Kant’s arguments, subsequent counter-arguments, or critically Hume’s arguments that Kant was reacting against. So you get blithe dismissals of Quine’s sophisticated attacks on the analytic/synthetic distinction and no mention of Wittgenstein’s. Of course, there’s also nothing but a brief nod to Einstein’s devastating overturning of key Kantian assumptions on space and time. All of which might be ok in an explication only of the first critique, but Robinson drips with unearned contempt for Darwin, modern analytic philosophy, and maybe modernity. It gets so bad that Robinson has to pull back at one point to warn his students that he’s not a pure Kantian. Instead he says, “I died with Aristotle in 322 B.C.” BARF! In other words, he is a high-level version of the wounded arrogant guy who doesn’t understand why he’s on the margins of his field and is angry about it (he was a fellow at Oxford, the equivalent of a lecturer in the US, and a guest lecturer at Princeton when I was there as an undergrad). Probably as a result, he is at times unbearably pretentious and condescending, for instance dropping in Shakespeare quotes in a phony voice then mocking students for not catching his references. All of which is too bad because the material is very interesting and historically important. And I had high hopes that Robinson’s background in neuropsychology would help him explain Kant in modern terms. Instead, you get a conservative Catholic dogmatist who every five minutes pulls back on possible weaknesses in Kant with the thought stopping verbal tick of “you see.” No, Dan, I don’t see why Kant isn’t a relativist about cognition if his views are relative to humanity as species. What I see is your dodging the issue for most of lecture seven with stories about Augustine and Thomas Reid, then a bunch of self-pitying whining and victim posing about how you can’t call the pope “his holiness” and Aristotelian teleology went out of style with Darwin.
  • Poppledop
    Exceptional Lectures
    Robinson is fantastic as both a professor of Kant and a lecturer on Kant. It is obvious that he knows the material well and at times he gets very enthusiastic about the subject matter--a refreshing pick me up for the listener. He does well at historically situating ideas and philosophies. The first lecture is mostly expressing the influences on Kant from the Empiricists to the Rationalists. He gives concrete examples and makes Kant accessible to newcomers. Listening to these lectures is probably the best way to learn Kant outside of a University. It's accessible, free and a wonderful introduction to one of the greatest thinkers of all time.
  • Tomasz Malisiewicz
    Lectures helped awaken me from my dogmatic slumber
    Excellent overview of Kant. I would highly recommend these lectures to any researcher interested in cognitive science, artificial intelligence, and/or philosophy of mind.
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