Kant's Ethics : the Good, Freedom, and the Will.
Kant is commonly regarded as a deontologist, and duty, rather than the good, is placed at the center of his ethics. By a comprehensive examination of Kant's views of the good, freedom and the will, this book aims to dispel this common misconception of Kant's ethics and to replace it with a...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Berlin :
De Gruyter,
2012.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Preface; Foreword; Introduction; Chapter I: The Context Of Kant's Ethics; 1 Kant's Conception Of Philosophy; 2 Kant's Philosophical Method: Logical and Transcendental; 3 The Chief Characteristics of Kant's Critical Thought; Chapter II: The Copernican Revolution In Ethics: The Good Reexamined; 1 The Primacy of the Moral Law in the Determination of the Good; 2 The Heterogeneity of the Good; 3 The Good as the Object of the Moral Law; Chapter III: Kant's Analysis Of The Will; 1 The Theoretical Background and Importance of the Religion; 2 Freedom; 3 The Human Will.
- 4 The Contribution of the Religion to EthicsChapter IV: The Moral Good And The Natural Good; 1 Terminological Problems; 2 The Intrinsic Goodness of Both the Natural Good and the Moral Good; 3 Particular Natural Goods and the Natural Good; 4 Particular Natural Goods as Extrinsic, Relational Goods; 5 The Qualification of the Natural Good by the Moral Good; 6 Summary; Chapter V: The Highest Good As The Material Object Of Moral Volition; 1 The Centrality of the Highest Good in Kant's Ethics; 2 Perfection (the Moral Good) as a Component of the Highest Good.
- 3 Happiness (the Natural Good) as a Component of the Highest Good4 The Unity of Perfection and Happiness in the Highest Good; Chapter VI: The Highest Good As Immanent And As Transcendent; 1 The Highest Good as the Canon of Pure Reason; 2 The Immanence of the Highest Good; 3 The Transcendence of the Highest Good; 4 The Constitutive Immanence and Regulative Transcendence of the Highest Good; Chapter VII: The Moral Task: The Embodiment Of The Highest Good; 1 The Moral Task as the Creation of Moral Schemata; 2 The Symbolic Schematism of the Highest Good.
- Chapter VIII: The Role Of Judgment In Kant's Procedural Formalism1 The Procedure of Judgment in All Employments; 2 The Procedures of Judgment in Ethics; 3 The Procedural Formalism of Kant's Ethics; Chapter IX: The Role Of Judgment In The Embodiment Of The Highest Good; 1 Moral Feeling; 2 The Cultivation of Moral Feeling; Chapter X: Summary And Assessment; 1 Kant's Attempt to Reconcile the Christian and Scientific Worldviews; 2 The Heterogeneity of the Good; 3 The Clarification of the Concept of Freedom; 4 Kant's Response to Diderot's Demand for Moral Guidance.
- 5 Kant's Absolute Concept of Freedom6 Moral Incentive in Kant's Ethics; 7 Ethical Orthodoxy in Religious Education; Appendix: Kant at Auschwitz; 1 The Holocaust; 2 Eichmann's Claim to be a Kantian; 3 Absolute Obedience in Kant's Ethics; 4 Devilishness as an Actual Mode of Freedom; 5 Alternative Explanations of Moral Responsibility; Kant's Works And Their Abbreviations; Other translations of Kant's works; Bibliography; Acknowledgements; Index.