Kant

Hochberg, Gary M

Kant Moral Legislation and to Senses of Will - America University Press Of America 2012 - 227p

includes index and biblioraphy

Two Senses of `Will`: A Prelimi¿nary Sketch Wille and WillkUr `Intrinsically Practical` Reason Kant`s Concept of a `Holy Will` and Its Importance for an Understanding of the Distinction Between Wille and WillkUr . 19 The Concept of `Choice`. Kant and Leibniz Kant and Aristotle Choice and the Human WillkUr The Problem of Alternative Act-Descriptions The Problem of `Knowing` One`s Maxim . Kant`s Moral Epistemology Some Problems with the Concept of the Human WillkUr How Many WillkUr`s? Kant`s Theories of the `Causality` of the Will Aristotle`s Doctrine of `Four Causes The `Causality` of WillkUr 1 The Third Antinomy and the `Causality` of WillkUr WillkUr as Spontaneous Efficient Cause . WillkUr as Partial Material Cause . . . The `Causality` of Wille 1. The Effects of Wille Wille as Formal and Final Cause Wille as Sufficient or Partial Cause The `Causality` of the Joint Faculty of the Will Concluding Remarks Chapter III: Legislation and the Distinction Between Wille and WillkUr The Need for Autonomy Legislation and the Faculty of Choice The Possibility of Hypothetical Imperatives Kant`s Theory of Moral Legislation . The Distinction Between Internal and External Legislation The Relation Between Internal and External Legislation Utilitarian Conceptions of Internal and External Sanctions Bentham Hume J. S. Mill The Role of the Concept of Legislation in Kant`s Theory of Moral The Possibility of Internal Legislation Legislation as the Origin of Obligation Obligation and Autonomous Legislation Kant and the Tradition of Contract Kant and Hobbes Kant and Rousseau Kant and Rawls Why Enter the Contract? Autonomy and Legislation The Relation Between Kant`s Concept Kant: Moral Legislation and Two Senses of Autonomy and the Wille/Willkur Dis¿tinction Why There is But One Moral Law Morality and Autonomous Legislation The `Abridgement` of Spontaneity Reasons for Acting Morally Plato and the Negation of Hypothetical Imperatives Freedom and Autonomy as Reciprocal Concepts Reason: Too Strong or Too Weak? Wolff on `Why Should I be Moral?`. The Contract Model Objections to the Contract Model Further Evidence in Support of the Con¿tract Model Kant`s Theory of the Will Kant`s Theory of Legislation

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N75.1KI / H655

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