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doi: 10.1038/040362a0
THE abundance of Kantian literature within recent years shows no signs of abating. In Germany itself there is quite a school of students who have taken for their motto “We must go back to Kant,” while in England the able commentaries of Prof. Caird and Prof. Watson have been succeeded by the studies of Dr. Hutchinson Stirling, Prof. Max Muller, and Dr. Mahaffy. Mr. Meiklejohn's translation of the “Kritik” still holds its own, though Mr. Belfort Bax and others have tried their hands on Kant, and made many improvements in detail. It is clear that the famous “Kritik of Pure Reason” is still regarded as a necessary element in all philosophic education, and as likely to continue longer in fashion than the more brilliant but less solid speculations of some of the successors of the Kantian school. Kant's Critical Philosophy for English Readers. By J. P. Mahaffy J. H. Bernard. (London: Macmillan and Co., 1889.)
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