Much of nineteenth-century philosophy may be viewed as either an affirmation or rejection of This volume therefore begins with Kant's magnum opus, the Critique of Pure Michelle Grier provides a masterly distillation of this monumental Curtis Bowman explores the central text of the first of the great post-Kantian idealists, Fichte who extended Kantian philosophy in a new Hegel, one of Kant's most formidable critics, is given incisive treatment by Michael Inwood in his presentation of the Phenomenology of Schopenhauer's World as Will and Representation, which hoped to solve many of the problems that Kant's philosophy left unsolved is explored in Dale Jacquette's The moral philosophy of John Stuart Mill, perhaps the only philosopher in this ..