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Kant’s Philosophy and the Idea of the Self-Made-Man

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dc.contributor.author Korkh, О. М.
dc.contributor.author Khmil, V. V.
dc.date.accessioned 2026-02-10T08:37:49Z
dc.date.available 2026-02-10T08:37:49Z
dc.date.issued 2026-02-10
dc.identifier.citation Korkh О. М., Khmil V. V. Kant’s Philosophy and the Idea of the Self-Made-Man. Anthropological Measurements of Philosophical Research, N. 25, 2024. C. 124-132. uk_UA
dc.identifier.issn 2227-7242
dc.identifier.issn 2304-9685
dc.identifier.uri http://biblio.umsf.dp.ua/xmlui/handle/123456789/8332
dc.description.abstract The authors of this article set the main purpose of understanding the ideological potential of Kant’s philosophical heritage from the viewpoint of its influence on the spread and legitimization of the self-made man idea in the worldview transformations of the modern world. Theoretical basis. Historical, analytical, and hermeneutic methods became fundamental for achieving the goal. The study is based on Kant’s works, as well as on the works of modern researchers of his ideological heritage. Originality. The analysis shows that the idea of the Self-made-man, which originated in the ancient world and gradually spread in the Western culture of the Middle Ages, early Modernism, and especially the Enlightenment, receives significant additional impulses in the context of Kant’s re-thinking of the metaphysical foundations in the theory of knowledge and morality. Perhaps, the systematic theoreti-cal substantiation of people’s abilities to use their own mind, their intellectual, and therefore moral autonomy, and freedom of will as the fundamental principles of personal Self-determination and Self-realization became the most important consequence of this rethinking. This, in turn, became the theoretical and moral-legal basis for further le-gitimization in the modern and postmodern world of the ideal of a person who creates oneself. Conclusions. The importance of Kant’s philosophy in the context of idea generation of the self-made man is hard to overestimate. It is entirely imbued with a leitmotif appeal to the individual to have the courage to use his/her own mind, to be inde-pendent and self-sufficient in assessments, choices, and actions, and therefore also responsible for their consequenc-es, in the end, to be primarily an end, not a means. Thanks to this, a person, according to Hegel, finds an uncondi-tionally strong and stable center in oneself. In fact, by strengthening the position of human-centric philosophy, as well as the moral and legal foundations of liberal humanism, Kant’s ideas provided further ideological legitimation in the orientation of an objectively growing individual towards actively placing Self-reliance and Personal responsi-bility on one’s own destiny as the key principles of the Self-made-man concept. uk_UA
dc.language.iso en uk_UA
dc.subject Kant’s philosophy uk_UA
dc.subject intellectual and moral autonomy uk_UA
dc.subject self-defined personality uk_UA
dc.subject the Self-made-man idea uk_UA
dc.title Kant’s Philosophy and the Idea of the Self-Made-Man uk_UA
dc.type Article uk_UA


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