Welcome! To be clear, I do think that Buddhist thought and Kantian thought are more often at odds than in alignment. It’s just that Garfield’s more careful analysis of the No-Self argument suggests that accepting the emptiness of “Self” doesn’t mean doing away with personhood-related concepts like moral responsibility.
That said, you might be interested in Dan Arnold’s Brains, Buddhas and Believing, which does try to interpret arguments from the Madhyamaka school as similar to contemporary Kantian critiques against reductionism about the mind.
Welcome! To be clear, I do think that Buddhist thought and Kantian thought are more often at odds than in alignment. It’s just that Garfield’s more careful analysis of the No-Self argument suggests that accepting the emptiness of “Self” doesn’t mean doing away with personhood-related concepts like moral responsibility.
That said, you might be interested in Dan Arnold’s Brains, Buddhas and Believing, which does try to interpret arguments from the Madhyamaka school as similar to contemporary Kantian critiques against reductionism about the mind.