In this scholarly tour de force, Reason's Verdict offers a meticulous reconstruction of Kant's moral philosophy by defending the structural integrity of the categorical imperative against its most sophisticated critics. With razor-sharp precision and transcendental rigor, the author systematically dismantles the central objections raised by figures such as Allen W. Wood, Christine Korsgaard, Onora O'Neill, and Jens Timmermann, revealing that many of their critiques arise from misreadings or reductions of Kant's formalism. Far from relying on sentimentalist ethics or substantive moral content, the work reaffirms the sovereignty of reason as the only legitimate source of normativity. Each chapter builds upon a dense conceptual architecture grounded in the unity of freedom, duty, and law, showing that Kant's ethics does not require empirical supplementation, narrative identity, or proceduralist recalibration. Instead, it unfolds as a self-sufficient system of moral judgment rooted in the rational autonomy of the will. With philosophical sobriety and stylistic elegance, the book refuses both historicist dilution and liberal domestication of Kant's moral project. The result is a revitalization of the Grundlegung as a timeless structure of ethical reason-irreducible to context, unyielding to skepticism, and immune to pragmatic circumvention. For readers seeking not only a defense of Kant but an immersion into the very logic of moral law, Reason's Verdict stands as a landmark in contemporary Kantian scholarship. A work not of commentary, but of philosophical vindication.
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