Do you agree that Kant's morals in the world, at present, is like a fish out of water, destined to die?
We have to put Kantian morals in its proper environment - one in which all Kantian principles are in effect. — TheMadFool
I think this is a misunderstanding. Kant's morals are personal. The goal of acting morally is not primarily to make society a better place. Rather, Kant argues that to act morally is to be free. You follow the rules because by doing so, you overcome all outside, contingent influences on your actions. — Echarmion
Imagine a world where everyone adopts behavior that is universalizable. Wouldn't all immoral behavior be absent? I would really like to see an immoral act that can be universalized which would contradict my belief that Kantian morals need to be adopted in toto to be realized as true instead of the partial treatment in the murderer at the door thought experiment. — TheMadFool
My issue lies within the dichotomy: you either have to lie, or you have to tell the murderer where your children are. — Clint Ryan
Imagine a world where everyone adopts behavior that is universalizable. — TheMadFool
I think this is a misunderstanding. Kant's morals are personal. The goal of acting morally is not primarily to make society a better place. — Echarmion
Kant is a bit like the bible. Many people misunderstand him, in so many different ways, that a person who happens upon his philosophy will learn nothing of what Kant was trying to say. — god must be atheist
But restrictions take away freedom. I restrict my behaviour to those of a set of behaviour which is accepted by Kantian standards. Restrction. I don't become freer. — god must be atheist
Kant explicitly argues otherwise though. Self-imposed restrictions do make your freer. Because if you don't impose restrictions on yourself, you're a slave to your instincts. — Echarmion
Kant explicitly argues otherwise though. Self-imposed restrictions do make your freer. Because if you don't impose restrictions on yourself, you're a slave to your instincts. — Echarmion
So if I am slave to my instincts, I am less free than if I am a slave to my other considerations, which have nothing to do with the embetterment of society as an end? — god must be atheist
Because they are not imposed by ME, I am just a medium via which Kant influences me to self-impose restrictions. Without Kant, I would be void of the self-imposed restrictions suggested by Kant, which satisfy Kantian parameters. — god must be atheist
You can act against conditioned response. But you can't act against natural instincts. — god must be atheist
Kant either uses the word "instinct" in a way which is different from what we understand to be instinctual behaviour; or else he is a moron. — god must be atheist
I used instinct as a shorthand. I am not sure Kant uses the word. What is meant is resisting said conditioned responses, among other things, in favour of a deliberative process which Kant calls rationality. — Echarmion
If so then I'm afraid (dull as it is) "She instinctively knew the right answer to the question." simply becomes "She automatically knew the right answer to the question." — Isaac
I think it's because "instinct" clearly applies only to sentient beings whereas "automaticity" sounds - at least to me - like something that an automaton or machine would do. — javra
I don't think that many people really intend to be lazy, for example. — Terrapin Station
They're not free to do so under Kantian morals. But we are not responsible for making them into moral beings. — Echarmion
No, but we are responsible for preventing harm to others by said human beings if we can do so, even if it requires lying to them. This trumps any categorical imperative, because preventing harm is more important than holding to a principle. — Marchesk
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.