Content area
Full Text
Arthur Ripstein. Force and Freedom: Kant's Legal and Political Philosophy. Cambridge, MALondon: Harvard University Press, 2009. Pp. xiii + 399. Cloth, $49.95.
This superb, exemplary account of Immanuel Kant's legal and political philosophy is essential reading not only for Kant scholars, but also for political philosophers and philosophers of law. Lucidly reasoned and written with crystalline clarity, the book is both accessible to non-specialists and a pleasure to read. Ripstein reveals the coherent, systematic structure of thought in Kant's obscurely written Doctrine of Right, and goes beyond illumination to defense and development of Kant's conception of equal freedom. In the course of doing all of this, he not only presents Kant in historical context, but also brings to light important differences between Kant's views and those of other political philosophers and philosophers of law, including John Locke, John Stuart Mill, H. L. A. Hart, and Ronald Dworkin, often enriching the discussion by referring to decisions or arguments made by courts in the U.S. or elsewhere. Ripstein shows that it is unjustifiable to exclude Kant from the primary canon of political philosophy, as is typical of current English-language teaching and scholarship.
State governments both tell people what to do and force them to do as they are...