Abstract

Kant never wrote a book with the title Critique of Pure Practical Reason, although at one point he believed he would write it. To readers of Kant, a Critique of Pure Practical Reason seems like an obvious extension to Critique of Pure Reason. Kant also thought so, as he believed in the parallel between the pure speculative reason and pure practical reason. While he never doubted the unity of reason, Kant changed his mind on the parallel. The consequence of this is the fate of Kant’s unwritten book with the title Critique of Pure Practical Reason. This paper examines how Kant came to believe that he needed to write such a book, and the reason he did not write it, and possible content of the Critique of Pure Practical Reason.

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