Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 March 2011
There has long been a suspicion that Kant's test for the universalizability of maxims can be easily subverted: instead of risking failing the test, design your maxim for any action whatsoever in a manner guaranteed to pass. This is the problem of maxim-fiddling. The present discussion of this problem has two theses:
1] That extant approaches to maxim-fiddling are not satisfactory;
2] That a satisfactory response to maxim-fiddling can be articulated using Kantian resources, especially the first two formulations of the categorical imperative.
This approach to maxim-fiddling draws our attention to a Kantian notion of an offence against morality itself that has largely been overlooked.