Concept of Kant’s Peace: Settling Disputes Peacefully

Abstract:

This essay is focused upon the concept of Perpetual Peace (1795) by the German Philosopher Immanuel Kant. To reach this goal, he advocated the establishment of a word federation of republican states. But some key prerequisites (s.c. preliminary and definitive articles) must be completed. The authoress compares the Kant's concepts with the ideas of solidarity by the Czech philosopher Jan Patočka. The readers themselves must pass the judgement whether Kant's prerequisites of eternal peace—even for more then two centuries—are fulfilled, or not. This subject matter belongs to a relatively young field of study dealing with war and peace, the so-called paxology, the theory how peace can be maintained in the world. This essay is focused upon the concept of Perpetual Peace (1795) by the German Philosopher Immanuel Kant. To reach this goal, he advocated the establishment of a word federation of republican states. But some key prerequisites (s.c. preliminary and definitive articles) must be completed. The authoress compares the Kant’s concepts with the ideas of solidarity by the Czech philosopher Jan Patočka. The readers themselves must pass the judgement whether Kant’s prerequisites of eternal peace—even for more then two centuries—are fulfilled, or not. This subject matter belongs to a relatively young field of study dealing with war and peace, the so-called paxology, the theory how peace can be maintained in the world.

Petra Průchová, born in 1983. She studied at the University of West Bohemia in Pilsen, Humanities Studies and the College of International and Public Relations in Prague, in area Politology and Policy in International and Public Relations. Since 2006 she is working as an English teacher in various schools, including English language according to STANAG 6001.

Country: Czech Republic

28/08/2014

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