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Index
Title
Copyright
Acknowledgments
1 Reintroducing Kant's Geography
I. The Invention of Geography: Kant and His Times
2 Immanuel Kant and the Emergence of Modern Geography
3 Kant's Geography in Comparative Perspective
II. From a Lecture Course of Forty Years to a Book Manuscript: Textual Issues
4 Kant's Lectures on “Physical Geography”: A Brief Outline of Its Origins, Transmission, and Development: 1754–1805
5 Historical and Philological References on the Question of a Possible Hierarchy of Human “Races,” “Peoples,” or “Populations” in Immanuel Kant—A Supplement.
6 Translating Kant's Physical Geography: Travails and Insights into Eighteenth Century Science (and Philosophy)
7 Writing Space: Historical Narrative and Geographical Description in Kant's
III. Towards a Cosmopolitan Education: Geography and Anthropology
8 “The Play of Nature”: Human Beings in Kant's Geography
9 The Pragmatic Use of Kant's Physical Geography Lectures
10 The Place of the Organism in Kantian Philosophy: Geography, Teleology, and the Limits of Philosophy
IV. Kant's Geography of Reason: Reason and Its Spatiality
11 Kant's Geography of Reason
12 Orientation in Thinking: Geographical Problems, Political Solutions
13 “The Unity of All Places on the Face of the Earth”: Original Community, Acquisition, and Universal Will in Kant's Doctrine of Right
V. Gender, Race, History, and Geography
14 Cosmopolitanism in the Anthropology and Geography
15 Is there Still Room for Freedom? A Commentary on David Harvey's “Cosmopolitanism in the Anthropology and Geography”
16 Kant's Third Thoughts on Race
17 The Darker Side of the Enlightenment: A De-Colonial Reading of Kant's Geography
18 Geography Is to History as Woman Is to Man: Kant on Sex, Race, and Geography
Contributors
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