Fran, you're right, of course !

But that, this limiting of effects of human thought within discreet
limits, is also erroneous. Maybe, we are not as yet ready to recognise
it and accept its implications because, for instance, it would upset
our judgement and our judicial norms.

It is nevertheless undeniable that thought, of the kind of Kant's,
arise from the same continuity ground from which, say, Nazism took
demagogic advantage of.

Before you chase me out of the ground, let me confess that Spinoza and
Kant were two philosophers who ruled the longest on my developing mind
among all western philosophers.

On Sep 3, 5:52 pm, frantheman <[email protected]> wrote:
> On 3 Sep., 11:07, rigsy03 <[email protected]> wrote:> Or duty may have had 
> some influence in the rise of Nazi Germany/
> > Fascism.
>
> Seeing Kant as an ideological antecedent for the Nazis is like placing
> the responsiblity for Charles Manson on the Beatles.
>
> Francis
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