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Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction Oliver Sensen; Part I. Kant's Conception of Autonomy: 2. Kantian autonomy and contemporary ideas of autonomy Thomas Hill; 3. Kant's conception of autonomy as sovereignty Andrews Reath; 4. Vindicating autonomy: Kant, Sartre, and O'Neill Karl Ameriks; 5. Progress toward autonomy Paul Guyer; Part II. The Development and Influence of Kant's Conception: 6. Transcending nature, unifying reason: on Kant's debt to Rousseau Richard Velkley; 7. Kant and the 'paradox' of autonomy Susan Shell; 8. Autonomy in Kant and German Idealism Henry Allison; 9. Autonomy after Kant Jerome Schneewind; 10. Personal autonomy and public authority Katrin Flikschuh; Part III. The Moral Significance of Kant's Conception: 11. Moralized nature, naturalized autonomy - Kant's way of bridging the gap in the Third Critique (and in the Groundwork) Heiner Klemme; 12. Autonomy and moral regard for ends Jens Timmermann; 13. 'A Free Will and a Will Under Moral Laws are the Same': Kant's concept of autonomy and his Thesis of Analyticity in Groundwork III Dieter Schönecker; 14. Morality and autonomy Philip Stratton-Lake; 15. The significance of autonomy Oliver Sensen; Postscript Onora O'Neill.