1/20
Looks like no tags are added yet.
Name | Mastery | Learn | Test | Matching | Spaced |
---|
No study sessions yet.
Who was Immanuel Kant?
German philosopher, the central figure in modern philosophy, 'father of the Enlightenment' and empiricist, created deontological (duty) ethics. Believed in absolutism and intrinsic right and wrong.
How does Kant argue freedom exists?
-Without freedom, morality is not possible
-Morality exists
-Therefore, freedom exists
What does Kant's argument for freedom demonstrate?
That determinism (the idea that all our actions and events are pre-determined) undermines morality.
How does Kant argue where freedom comes from?
-Without reason we are a slave to our passions
-If we were slaves to our passions we wouldn't be free
-Therefore without reason we would not be free
How does Kant combine his first two premises?
-Without reason there is no freedom
-Without freedom there is no morality
-Therefore without reason there is no morality
What are the three groups Kant identifies in morality?
-ANIMALS: Only follow desires, no reason (phenomenal realm)
-HUMANS: Both desires and reason, choose which to follow (both realms)
-ANGELS: Only reason (noumenal realm)
Why is it important that humans exist in both realms and have both desire and reason, according to Kant?
If we only acted on our desires we would do morally wrong action. If we were perfectly rational we would only do the right thing but only angels/God can do that. The tension between rationality and desire leaves room for duty.
Outline Kantian 'duty' ethics?
Duty is an absolute (we are REQUIRED to do good/act morally)
What is good will?
Acts done for the sake of duty / for good itself. All acts are either selfish or duty-motivated.
What is the shopkeeper analogy?
Kant uses the shopkeeper analogy:
-A shopkeeper can choose to overcharge a child or not
-He chooses not to do so as it is wrong
-However, this could be selfish if it was done because the child could tell their parents and lose him business
-It is only moral and good if done because it was wrong itself
What is the quote Kant uses to describe good will?
"Nothing can possibly be conceived in the world or even out of it, which can be called good without qualification except good will." -Immanuel Kant
What are the 4 duties according to Kant?
-PERFECT DUTIES TO SELF
-IMPERFECT DUTIES TO SELF
-PERFECT DUTIES TO OTHERS
-IMPERFECT DUTIES TO OTHERS
Explain perfect duties to self and others?
Perfect duties are all duties that are 100% necessary and should never be violated. Those to the self are to preserve our own lives (eating) and those to others are unbreakable and relate to our relationships with others (Don't do harm).
Explain imperfect duties to others and self?
Imperfect duties can be broken if needed. To self it is to improve yourself (study/practise something) and to others it is to help them (giving to charity).
What is the summum bonum?
the highest, most supreme good, only achievable in the afterlife
What are imperatives?
Imperatives are the commands that govern humans as not fully rational or fully desire-driven beings, they tell us what we should do but we make the choice. Practical goodness will determine the will based on reason alone. Objective morality according to Kant is based wholly on reason.
What are the types of imperatives?
-HYPOTHETICAL
-CATAGORICAL
Define categorical imperatives
Are not based on consequence and MUST HAPPEN. Morality is a categorical imperative.
What was Kant's first formulation?
'Act only in accordance with that maxim through which you can at the same time will that it become a universal law'
-We should only do the things that as a rule can be universally applied, that we can imagine everyone in the world following.
What was Kant's second formulation?
'The human being… exists as an end in itself, not merely as a means to the discretionary use of this or that will'
-Kant says we must treat all rational beings as equal and valuable
Define hypothetical imperatives
Commands to obtain something else that you want