Cosmopolitanism for Earth dwellers: Kant on the right to be somewhere

Huber, J. (2017). Cosmopolitanism for Earth dwellers: Kant on the right to be somewhere. Kantian Review, 22(1), 1-25. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1369415416000340
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The paper provides a systematic account of Kant’s ‘right to be somewhere’ as introduced in the Doctrine of Right. My claim is that Kant’s concern with the concurrent existence of a plurality of corporeal agents on the earth’s surface (to which the right speaks) occupies a rarely appreciated conceptual space in his mature political philosophy. In grounding a particular kind of moral relation that is ‘external’ (as located in bounded space) but not property-mediated, it provides us with a fundamentally new perspective on Kant’s cosmopolitanism, which I construe as a cosmopolitanism for ‘earth dwellers’.

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