Pablo Muchnik's Kant's Theory of Evil provides a fresh and creative perspective on Kant's thinking about human responsibility for good and for evil. It offers a new interpretive strategy for the resolution for key issues that frequently perplexed earlier commentators. Muchnik offers a persuasive defense of the systematic importance of Kant's account of evil within the critical project, locating it as key part of an architectonic of practical reason and a central element of the moral anthropology that begins to emerge in the latter stages of Kant's work.