Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
- Aristotle on the Soul's Conflicts: Toward an Understanding of Virtue Ethics
- Coercion, Ideology, and Education in Hobbes's Leviathan
- The Hobbesian Side of Hume
- The Natural Goodness of Humanity
- Metaphysics, Philosophy: Rousseau on the Problem of Evil
- Within the Limits of Reason
- A Cosmopolitan Kingdom of Ends
- Legislating for a Realm of Ends: The Social Dimension of Autonomy
- Kant on the Objectivity of the Moral Law
- Kantian Virtue: Priggish or Passional?
- Taking the Law into Our Own Hands: Kant on the Right to Revolution
- Kant on Aesthetic and Biological Purposiveness
- Kant on Ends and the Meaning of Life
- Community and Completion
A Cosmopolitan Kingdom of Ends
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
- Aristotle on the Soul's Conflicts: Toward an Understanding of Virtue Ethics
- Coercion, Ideology, and Education in Hobbes's Leviathan
- The Hobbesian Side of Hume
- The Natural Goodness of Humanity
- Metaphysics, Philosophy: Rousseau on the Problem of Evil
- Within the Limits of Reason
- A Cosmopolitan Kingdom of Ends
- Legislating for a Realm of Ends: The Social Dimension of Autonomy
- Kant on the Objectivity of the Moral Law
- Kantian Virtue: Priggish or Passional?
- Taking the Law into Our Own Hands: Kant on the Right to Revolution
- Kant on Aesthetic and Biological Purposiveness
- Kant on Ends and the Meaning of Life
- Community and Completion
Summary
There is an often unspoken assumption at work in modern moral philosophy that morality is in important ways independent of social and political institutions. The intuitive idea is that whatever morality requires of us as individuals, it will be something that we are, as individuals, able to do, or able to do to the degree that we are virtuous or good. The assumed moral effect on us of political and social institutions is either, positively, to provide us with a set of benefits and burdens, the enjoyment and discharge of which may give us occasion for moral action, or negatively, if we hold political office or have some role with special responsibilities, to sometimes call for compromise with moral principle in order to do what is politically or institutionally necessary.
Kant's ethics has often seemed the exemplar of such a “separate spheres” conception of ethics and politics. Social and political institutions are presumed to arise as the necessary strategy for negotiating the natural lawlessness of collective life. Morality, by contrast, has its source in the a priori requirements of practical reason. It is thus both independent of and prior to politics. Moral action, accordingly, is a matter of bringing the will into conformity with a priori principles of practical reason. What calls for philosophy is the demonstration that this is possible.
The complement to this view of morality is a conception of the moral person as an autonomous individual acting under the burden of practical reason (in particular, the necessitation of the categorical imperative).
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- Reclaiming the History of EthicsEssays for John Rawls, pp. 187 - 213Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
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