Central to modern biology and the study of life is the concept of the
organism—roughly, a body with interconnected parts that make specific
contributions to the development and functioning of the whole. There
are competing organism concepts even today, but the 18th century was a
critical period in which thinkers gradually shed prior ideas of life in
terms of a body with a principle of spontaneous motion, a body as a mere
physical mechanism, or a body infused with vital spirits. In When Metaphysics Meets Biology: Kantian approaches to the concept of organism (Routledge, 2026),
Philippe Huneman combines extensive scholarship in the history and
philosophy of biology with Kantian critical philosophy and metaphysics
to trace Kant’s contributions to the emerging organism concept. Huneman
discusses the Critique of the Power of Judgment and other
writings in which Kant developed a view of organisms as natural purposes
and in which part-whole reasoning by the faculty of judgment is a
condition of the possibility of thinking of organisms at all. Huneman,
who is director of research at the Institute of History and Philosophy
of Science and Technology at CNRS and University of Paris 1 –
Pantheon-Sorbonne, provides an account of Kant’s thinking that is
accessible yet promises to bring this neglected aspect of Kant into
dialogue with contemporary Kantian scholarship.
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