This conclusion is derived from modal logic, one axiom of which goes like this: □P -> ◇P = If necessary that P then possible that P. Duties are necessary (obligatory) only if it's possible for them to be fulfilled. — TheMadFool
This is not Kant's example. If you think it is, then you need to read it. Kant's point, among several, is that in replying to the murderer at the door, you do not know where your friend is, and consequently if you lie, you may actually then have killed your fried, except in this latter case, you bear responsibility! And other points as well. Read the thing!You tell the truth. Your friend dies but you've told the truth. — TheMadFool
In deontic logic the diamond operator means “permissible”, not “possible”, just like the box operator means “obligatory” rather than “necessary”. So it follows that if something is obligatory it is permissible, and if it’s not permissible it’s not obligatory, but that doesn’t say anything at all about alethic possibility: it might be that morally obligatory things are impossible so we’re just fucked — Pfhorrest
□p (necessarily p) is equivalent to ¬◇¬p ("not possible that not-p")
◇p (possibly p) is equivalent to ¬□¬p ("not necessarily not-p") — Wikipedia
But I don’t think any of this is really necessary to make sense of Kant. He was just being inconsistent. Surely his categorical imperative would generally prohibit killing, but Kant was fine with capital punishment, so sometimes killing must be okay, by his reasoning. If killing can sometimes be excused even though it’s generally wrong, surely the same must apply to lying. — Pfhorrest
You're talking about deontic logic but it's an offshoot of modal logic, the latter subsuming the former as it were. Ergo, if something goes wrong at the level of modal logic, it wouldn't work in deontic logic too.
Think of it.
Modal Logic: If necessary P then possible P
Deontic Logic: If necessary P then permissible P
If deontic logic were independent of modal logic then it should be possible for a proposition P to be impossible and yet permissible. That doesn't make sense, right? The permissible supervenes on the possible. — TheMadFool
I didn't know Kant supported the death penalty and Wikipedia describes it as an "extreme position". Noted! However, does it follow from his ethics? I'd like to see how it does if it does? Any ideas? — TheMadFool
There's no modal logic I'm aware of that has [] as obligation and <> as possibility, and it would be really weird if there were — Pfhorrest
I don't know off the top of my head of Kant's own justification for his pro-capital-punishment position in light of his broader ethics, but I would expect it would be something along the lines of the full context of an act mattering for the general duty you're following. Instead of "never do X", a duty could be "never do X when Y unless Z". So he might have thought the general rule was "never kill someone who's not actively trying to kill someone else unless as punishment for attempted murder" or something like that. If so, he could just as readily have endorsed a more sophisticated duty regarding lying, and it seems irrational of him to have instead bit the bullet and just insisted that all lying is always wrong all the time no matter what. — Pfhorrest
there's a contradiction that follows from Kant's ethics in the lying to a murderer thought experiment — TheMadFool
Please visit Stanford Encyclopedia Of Philosophy. — TheMadFool
Also why would it be "weird"? Really why? What makes it weird? — TheMadFool
Take a moment to consider the situation if someone did tell you that a certain action x is impossible but that x permissible. Impossible means you can't do it and permissible is you may do it. That you may or may not do something makes sense only if it's possible to do that thing, right? In the simplest sense, permissible implies that you have an option but impossible implies that you have none! — TheMadFool
So, you're of the opinion that Kant's notion of moral duties came with caveats, conditions that made room for his pro-death stance? — TheMadFool
The only way Kant's pro-death views make sense is if it's a moral duty to execute murderers. — TheMadFool
I have, many times. Do you have a particular part in mind? — Pfhorrest
On a broad level, it mixes "is" with "ought" in a way that doesn't normally fly. For a narrower example, it would imply that nothing that can (possibly) happen is wrong (forbidden), since "P is forbidden" = "[]~P" (if [] is deontic) and "P is possible" = "<>P" (if <> is alethic), and <>P iff ~[]~P (in all forms of modal logic), which would read as "it is possible that P if and only if it is not forbidden that P", if <> were alethic and [] were deontic. — Pfhorrest
context-sensitive duty — Pfhorrest
1. You tell the truth. Your friend dies but you've told the truth. You're good (you fulfilled your duty to truth) AND you're bad (you failed your duty to value life)
2. You lie. You save your friend but now you've lied. You're good (duty to value life fulfilled) AND you're bad (you fail your duty to truth) — TheMadFool
You're all over the place at least that's how it seems to me. Can you break up what you said into two sections 1) Modal logic and 2) Deontic logic and then explain how it's weird that diamond operator should refer to possibility? — TheMadFool
It's not possible that (you shouldn't lie AND you should save your friend) — TheMadFool
One hint, One word, universalizability. — TheMadFool
There's nothing weird about the diamond operator meaning possibility, in an alethic modal logical, wherein box means necessity. What's weird is if you mix alethic and deontic modes like you suggest. — Pfhorrest
Universalizability means that it applies for all similarly-situated moral agents.
Or to quote Wikipedia, "the most common interpretation is that the categorical imperative asks whether the maxim of your action could become one that everyone could act upon in similar circumstances".
The circumstances can be accounted for without compromising the universalizability. — Pfhorrest
Kant used the example of lying as an application of his ethics: because there is a perfect duty to tell the truth, we must never lie, even if it seems that lying would bring about better consequences than telling the truth — Wikipedia
However, deontic logic supervenes, if not in entirety at least in the part that's got to do with relationship between possibility and permissibility, over modal logic, right? — TheMadFool
I don't see and context-sensitive assertions being made. :chin: — TheMadFool
"Modal logic" isn't just alethic modal logic, the logic of necessity and possibility. Alethic modalities are just one kind of modality. There are different kinds of modalities, and they don't necessarily have to have any relationship to each other; as in, it's not baked into the logic itself — Pfhorrest
Yes, and that's the perplexing thing about Kant on lying, because his system generally seems to permit maxims that take context into account, and in other opinions (such as about capital punishment) he seems to take context into account, so why not on lying? — Pfhorrest
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