Mostrando postagens com marcador Kant. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Kant. Mostrar todas as postagens

Kant e os bastardos

De uma tradução para o inglês da Metafísica da moral, de Immanuel Kant. Tradução:
Uma criança que vem ao mundo fora do casamento nasce fora da lei (pois a lei é o casamento) e, portanto, fora da proteção da lei. Ela foi, por assim dizer, roubada para dentro da comunidade (como o contrabando de mercadorias), de modo que a comunidade pode ignorar a sua existência (visto que justificadamente não deveria ter vindo a existir desta maneira), e pode, portanto, também ignorar a sua aniquilação; e nenhum decreto pode remover a vergonha da mãe quando se torna conhecido que ela deu nascimento sem ser casada.
Não há o que dizer quanto a isso. Resta só a perplexidade.

Como destacou Eric Schwitzgebel, há mais trechos igualmente lamentáveis sobre a propriedade de esposas, servos e crianças; a homossexualidade; a masturbação e a doação de órgãos.
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A vida sexual de Kant, e o imperativo categórico

Presumably Kant's sex life involved asking 'What if everyone did that?'
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Bernard-Henri Lévy se deu mal

When France’s most dashing philosopher took aim at Immanuel Kant in his latest book, calling him “raving mad” and a “fake”, his observations were greeted with the usual adulation. To support his attack, Bernard-Henri Lévy — a showman-penseur known simply by his initials, BHL — cited the little-known 20th-century thinker Jean-Baptiste Botul.

There was one problem: Botul was invented by a journalist in 1999 as an elaborate joke, and BHL has become the laughing stock of the Left Bank.

There were clues. One supposed work by Botul — from which BHL quoted — was entitled The Sex Life of Immanuel Kant. The philosopher’s school is known as Botulism and subscribes to his theory of “La Metaphysique du Mou” — the Metaphysics of the Flabby. Botul even has a Wikipedia entry that explains that he is a “fictional French philosopher”.

But Mr Lévy, a leader among the nouveaux philosophes school of the 1970s, was unaware. In On War in Philosophy, he writes that Botul had proved once and for all “just after the Second World War, in his series of lectures to the neo-Kantians of Paraguay, that their hero was an abstract fake, a pure spirit of pure appearance”.

His credulity was spotted by Aude Lancelin, a journalist with the Le Nouvel Observateur, the left-leaning weekly that is de rigueur for the thinking classes. The Botul quotes were “a nuclear gaffe that raises questions on the Lévy method”, she wrote.

Mr Lévy admitted last night that he had been fooled by Botul, the creation of a literary journalist, Frédéric Pages, but he was not exactly contrite....

Ms Lancelin told The Times she was surprised that none of the journalists who had been giving Mr Lévy the celebrity treatment had noted that he spent two pages using a non-existent philosopher to prove his argument. “I came across the quotes from Botul and burst out laughing,” she said.
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