By Sheppard L.
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Example text
Pietism was a radical Protestant movement, similar to and greatly influenced by English puritanism. It played a significant role in the development of modern Prussia, providing that society with an ethos of industriousness, discipline and reverence that suited an enterprising but absolutist regime. The experience of his mother’s early death must clearly have developed in him a spirit of independence and self-reliance that was cruelly enhanced when his father died in 1746 when Kant was still a student.
We have to see this relationship from two sides, not only from the standpoint of ourselves coming across another individual (and not wanting to be treated badly) but also from the standpoint of another coming across us (and also not wanting to be taken advantage of). Kant therefore implicitly condemns the European practice in relation to other inhabitants of the globe of subduing nations, taking hold of their property and territory. He praises in this context the actions of the Japanese and the Chinese in thoroughly restricting the access of Europeans to their territories.
By all accounts his ‘Pietist’ parents Johann and Anna Kant were the most devout and Christian of parents. Pietism was a radical Protestant movement, similar to and greatly influenced by English puritanism. It played a significant role in the development of modern Prussia, providing that society with an ethos of industriousness, discipline and reverence that suited an enterprising but absolutist regime. The experience of his mother’s early death must clearly have developed in him a spirit of independence and self-reliance that was cruelly enhanced when his father died in 1746 when Kant was still a student.