Kant’s Philosophy of Communication provides a valuable and thought-provoking reassessment of Kant’s place in the rhetorical tradition. Complementing recent work by Scott Stroud, Pat Gehrke, and others who have essayed an expanded role for rhetoric in Kant’s critical works, Ercolini focuses on texts at the edges of the Kantian canon to produce an account of an “‘other’ Kant” (7) who provides a counter-narrative to caricatures of enlightenment thought as being dismissive of rhetoric (220). Ercolini frames Kant’s enlightenment as a practice: a process of embodied, collective knowledge production and critique with a robust role for rhetoric, communication, and social exchange (220). In addition to contributing to rhetorical studies of Kant, this account of Kant as an explorer of the social, embodied, and affective dimensions of thought takes a place beside the work of twentieth- and twenty-first-century philosophers, from Gilles Deleuze and Michel Foucault to Jean-François Lyotard and Jürgen Habermas, who...
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May 2017
This article was originally published in
Advances in the History of Rhetoric
Book Review|
May 04 2017
Kant’s Philosophy of Communication: G. L. Ercolini, Pittsburgh, PA: Duquesne University Press, 2016. pp. 251. ISBN: 978-0-8207-0486-9, $30.00 (Paper). Available to Purchase
Advances in the History of Rhetoric (2017) 20 (2): 221–223.
Citation
Matthew Bost; Kant’s Philosophy of Communication: G. L. Ercolini, Pittsburgh, PA: Duquesne University Press, 2016. pp. 251. ISBN: 978-0-8207-0486-9, $30.00 (Paper).. Advances in the History of Rhetoric 4 May 2017; 20 (2): 221–223. doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/15362426.2017.1325666
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