"This is the introduction to Kant’s anthropology that no serious student of Kant should miss. Frierson also offers a remarkably fresh take on the question of his ongoing relevance on a variety of contemporary philosophic and political debates, from socio-biology to the problem of human evil. Highly recommended." - Susan Shell, Boston College, USA"The most philosophically engaging account of Kant's theory of human nature that I have read. Its chief virtue is its successful attempt to engage Kant's anthropology in dialogue with a variety of competing post-Kantian theories of human nature in a way that is neither depressingly dogmatic nor bluntly dismissive." - Robert Louden, University of Southern Maine, USA"Anyone committed to developing an authentically Kantian conception of human being as a viable position in contemporary debates, or merely interested in the issue of human being from a Kantian perspective, will find this to be an indispensable source." - Robert Burch, University of Alberta, Canada "An impressively thorough and up to date discussion of Kant's wide-ranging philosophical anthropology - a field that overlaps with key issues concerning science, psychology, history, ethics, and religion. Recent years have seen an explosion of interesting work on this topic, but perhaps no one has covered as much of the field as usefully as Frierson has here." - Karl Ameriks, University of Notre Dame, USA