Analysis of Foundations of the Metaphysics of Morals by Immanuel Kant
Opinionated Analysis of Kant's Short Work
From the way he's describing it, it seems that "pure" philosophy is more of a gifted trait in people, meaning it's just something you have or you don't have, it's some kind of connection people have with philosophy. How can people develop this sense if they aren't born with it? Let's say that after 19 years of wondering what it's like, I started to play golf. If I happen to be good at it, after never playing before, that would be like his idea of "pure" philosophy. If however I'm pretty terrible, but decide to practice since I'd like to be good some day, that would be considered "empirical." There'd be no way for me to practice my "pure" sense that way; my only chance for getting better would be from practicing. I can't suddenly develop a gifted connection with the sport, no matter how much I try (if I'm terrible at it that is).
It's a good idea in theory, and a good idea to have for your readers, but something which I feel is impossible to accomplish.
Rather than break down Kant's reading by the chapters and nitpick every little comment he makes (I'm assuming that'll make for an extremely long and whiney-sounding read), I'd rather combine all of his main ideas and talk about them all at once.
Kant's metaphysics involve the ideas of actions which are based on "goodwill," "maxims" which are the groundwork for all of our decisions and actions in life, and hoping that these decisions come a priori to us, or come naturally to us. He also explains that we should act on maxims that would become "universal laws" for other people, I suppose that means only acting on maxims that other people could learn from, and that only the end result of an action matters (so long as it was a decision made with reason), something I severely disagree with. He believes that someone could have positive or negative intentions while performing an action (or acting on a maxim), and if it has a positive outcome then his intentions do not matter. I feel the exact opposite of this idea. If someone has a negative or harmful intention and manages to have a positive outcome with their actions, I feel there's a pretty good chance that whatever outcome came was by either an accident or a sudden change of heart, with the change of heart having a slim chance of happening. If a positive outcome came by mistake, there's a pretty good chance that this person will still have negative intentions and will continue to.
Overall, much like the point in his introduction, I like Kant's theory on reason and decision-making, and I'd like to believe that it would work, but it seems like there are too many flaws in it. It's tough to admit it, but there are some people out there who are just plain mean and always have negative intentions to their actions, and I feel his entire ethical system just doesn't factor these people in, especially if he wants people to perform actions based solely on their sense of duty. While I realize that there aren't many ethical systems out there that would involve rogue factors such as pure villains, our goal in studying these systems is to become educated in reason and to possibly even develop our own moral ethical system, one that I feel has enough room to factor in these kinds of people, and I feel Kant doesn't quite do this. The rest of Foundations of the Metaphysics of Morals seems to consist of Kant defending his system and listing practical implications of it. Some of his ideas work, such as in Chapter 2 when he describes the categorical imperative and how underlying ideas behind how duties are formed. These groundwork ideas I believe are true, in come cases, but they don't work well when applied to his ethical system. Many of his arguments appear to be invalid as they assume the best intentions out of people.
Source: Foundations of the Metaphysics of Morals, Second Edition. Written by Immanuel Kant.
Published by Christopher Cacace
I'm a recent graduate with a background in proofreading, editing and photography but I'm hoping to expand my writing portfolio a bit. Whatever keeps the wheels turning, right? View profile
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4 Comments
Post a CommentHi Christopher,
I enjoyed reading your article. I am researching Kant for one of my classes. How would I cite your article?
Thanks, Shelly P
I have just read Groundwork of the Metaphysic of Moral for my disertation and I agree that Kant relys too much on the idea that everyone underneath is a good person and will follow is ''god compass''. Also in is book he seems to think everyone has the same moral compass when devoid of every inclination desire, etc. Which is not the case. After all, I doubt someone raised to be a cannibal or for whom the culture is vastly different than ours will have the same morals. For example; the SS childrens of hitlers regime who were raised to think killing jew's was a normal thing would not have the same morals as a modern persons.
And btw manolo your a failure, you only bash the writer saying they dont have idea to prove her/is criticism while you dont have anything relevant to say as to why exactly the criticism is not good.
you talk too much,im looking for a good criticism on kantian ethics, you have indeed "wanted" to hit his idea hard, however you do not have ideas to prove your criticisms. i think you just read tertiary books on kant, or probably comments on his works, statements against him...funny you talk too much that is why i commented on your page.. read more, think deep, good thing you talk a lot, however not enough knowledge. your not that deep but your aggressiveness matters
you talk too much,im looking for a good criticism on kantian ethics, you have indeed "wanted" to hit his idea hard, however you do not have ideas to prove your criticisms. i think you just read tertiary books on kant, or probably comments on his works, statements against him...funny you talk too much that is why i commented on your page.. read more, think deep, good thing you talk a lot, however not enough knowledge. your not that deep but your aggressiveness matters