This collection of essays is the first comprehensive volume dedicated to Kant's lectures on anthropology and their philosophical importance.This volume is the first comprehensive assessment of Kant's lectures on anthropology. Exploring a wide range of topics, from the epistemological and psychological to the moral and cultural, this collection is of interest to scholars and upper-level students of Kant, the history of anthropology and the social sciences.This volume is the first comprehensive assessment of Kant's lectures on anthropology. Exploring a wide range of topics, from the epistemological and psychological to the moral and cultural, this collection is of interest to scholars and upper-level students of Kant, the history of anthropology and the social sciences.Kant's lectures on anthropology, which formed the basis of his Anthropology from a Pragmatic Point of View (1798), contain many observations on human nature, culture and psychology and illuminate his distinctive approach to the human sciences. The essays in the present volume, written by an international team of leading Kant scholars, offer the first comprehensive scholarly assessment of these lectures, their philosophical importance, their evolution and their relation to Kant's critical philosophy. They explore a wide range of topics, including Kant's account of cognition, the senses, self-knowledge, freedom, passion, desire, morality, culture, education and cosmopolitanism. The volume will enrich current debates within Kantian scholarship as well as beyond, and will be of great interest to upper-level students and scholars of Kant, the history of anthropology, the philosophy of psychology and the social sciences.Introduction Alix Cohen; 1. Kant's lectures on anthropology: some orienting remarks Werner Stark; 2. Self-cognition and self-assessment Rudolf A. Makkreel; 3. Kant on the phenomenology of touch and vision Gary Hatfield; 4. Meat on the bones: Kant's account of cognition in the anthropology lectl“2