Kantianism
Kantianism is a general term for philosophical positions that are in direct succession and with close reference to Immanuel Kant.
Under Kantianism one summarizes various groups of Kant succession:
- Direct students who spread the philosophy of Kant ( Marcus Herz, Gottlob Benjamin Jasche, Carl Christian Erhard Schmid, Johann Gottfried Kiesewetter, Wilhelm Traugott Krug ), see also: Friedrich Gottlob Born
- Philosophers whose teachings closely follow-up to Kant, although certain modifications took place (Carl Leonhard Reinhold, Jakob Friedrich Fries, Salomon Maimon, Friedrich Eduard Beneke )
- The neo-Kantianism (eg Southwest German school) in the second half of the 19th century
- The criticism ( independent of the neo-Kantian Kant representative)
- Kant researchers of the present, which closely follow Kant, such as Henry E. Allison, Rainer Brandt, Paul Guyer, Dieter Henrich, Otfried Hoffe, Helmut Holzhey, Gerold Prauss, Dieter Schoenecker.
- More representative: Friedrich Karl Forberg, Eric Weil