Abstract

The author of this paper analyses the theological, cosmological and cosmogonical ideas that Kant defended in his first book, The General History of Nature and Theory of Heavens, and claims that they were the result of his attempt to synthetise Leibnitzian theology with Newtonian physics. Furthermore, the author claims that these early ideas are the source of Kant's later conceptions of morality, law and history of human race.

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