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23 Φεβ 2004 · The basic idea, as Kant describes it in the Groundwork, is that what makes a good person good is his possession of a will that is in a certain way “determined” by, or makes its decisions on the basis of, whatever basic moral principles there may be.
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- Kant and Hume on Morality
The relationship between Immanuel Kant (1724–1804) and David...
- Kant's Philosophy of Religion
1. Overview. The impression through the twentieth century of...
- Kant's Transcendental Idealism
The form of that theory is a priori determinable from the...
- Respect
In A Theory of Justice (1971) he argues that self-respect...
- Consequentialism
Consequentialism, as its name suggests, is simply the view...
- Philosophical Development
Modern philosophy begins with Kant, and yet he marks the end...
- Kant's Social and Political Philosophy
The second is the “form of government” concerning how those...
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31 Αυγ 2019 · In his view, the basis for our sense of what is good or bad, right or wrong, is our awareness that human beings are free, rational agents who should be given the respect appropriate to such beings—but what exactly does that entail?
24 Ιουλ 2007 · The second is the “form of government” concerning how those people rule, and here Kant offers a variation on the traditional good/bad dichotomy: either republican or despotic. By “republican,” Kant means “separation of the executive power (the government) from the legislative power”.
1 Ιαν 2018 · Kant’s distinction between private and public reason in “What Is Enlightenment?” seems to support traditional public administration beliefs that bureaucrats must carry out their governmental roles even if they do not necessarily agree with the commands that they follow.
7 Σεπ 2010 · This chapter considers intuitionist and Kantian approaches to ethics, Chapter 16, utilitarian and consequentialist theories, and Chapter 17, contractualist theories.
23 Φεβ 2004 · In Kant's terms, a good will is a will whose decisions are wholly determined by moral demands or as he often refers to this, by the Moral Law. Human beings view this Law as a constraint on their desires, and hence a will in which the Moral Law is decisive is motivated by the thought of duty .
Kant’s ethical theory emphasized reason, autonomy, and a respect for the humanity of others. These central aspects of his theory of individual moral choice are carried over to his theories of humanity’s history and of ideal political organization.