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#1
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| About Kant's categorical imperative: Is it only about perfect duty (i.e. not doing an action that would contradict itself like lying or stealing) or does it directly lead to the second formulation (humans as ends, not means)? My reasoning is that if the categorical imperative treats every action as if it were to become universal law, and you obviously don't want to be treated simply as a means, then doesn't that necessarily imply that everyone should be treated as least partially as an end? I'm asking because the interrelatedness could have important implications when it comes to practical/applied ethics, like abortion. If you take the second formulation by itself then it would imply that you should only treat other moral agents as ends, and surely unborn humans are not capable of moral deliberation. On the other hand, it the second formulation were integrated with the first one, it would cause a "transfer of rights." My reasoning being that since you would not want to be aborted in the past now it goes back in time to give you the rights to be treated as an ends. I know it might sound a bit odd, but hang on with me here. However, if you take the first and second formulations separately, abortion could be viewed as possibly moral. This is because abortion in itself does not contradict perfect duty while the second formulation would postulate that only moral agents are capable of having rights. So thus if you don't "mesh" the two, you wouldn't really get any rights for the unborn. j/w |
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#2
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| Re: Question about Kantian ethics Quote:
![]() Abortion is a matter of the state and would not have anything to do with morals. The doctor performing the abortion is an officer of the state and is not acting for himself. The ethics board for doctors would have some bearing on this but only as far as whether the doctor is working within the state-specified law. |
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#3
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| Re: Question about Kantian ethics Quote:
1. Kant talks of the Kingdom of Ends, it is agents in this group that the categorical imperative applies too, not just humans. (I think) 2. I think the requirements for the Kingdom of Ends is thus: Rational, Self-Aware, and Free Will. 3. I think there are three formulations of the categorical imperative, I can't find it right now, but perhaps you can find more insight in the third formulation. According to 2. above, an unborn baby would not fall into the Kingdom of Ends, and therefore the categorical imperative does not apply to it. But one may travel down a slippery slope and ask when does a person actually become 'Rational'? Quote:
I think the CI relates to the possibility of universalizing the maxim. For instance, is it possible for society to continue if every person always lied, or is it possible for society to continue if every person murdered another person. The answer to both is No, so therefore the maxim cannot be universalized. (I may be wrong on this part, it has been a long time) --- All in all, regarding the abortion issue, you first need to define if rather or not a fetus is a person, and therefore if it falls within the Kingdom of Ends. Quote:
__________________ de omnibus dubitandum est |
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#5
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| Re: Question about Kantian ethics Quote:
Every personal choice boils down to a moral choice. The State can only try to direct us in one direction, and punish us if we don't adhere to their rules.
__________________ de omnibus dubitandum est |
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#6
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| Re: Question about Kantian ethics The third formulation is the kingdom of ends. My issue with the subject is that technically speaking, one could make the argument that you are a moral agent now, and therefore fall under the kingdom of ends, but you wouldn't want to be aborted when you were unborn even though you didn't qualify for the same rights. Essentially, the question is whether or not the future rights of the unborn carry over to now because they will be in "the kingdom of ends" in the future. As for suicide, it is also immoral using the categorical imperative, so saying that you wish you were aborted isn't really valid, IMO. |
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#7
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| Re: Question about Kantian ethics Quote:
![]() Abortion is entirely a legal matter and an action, if you allow that the state is an agent, of the state and entirely beyond questions of morality. If a person performs an abortion without a license, that is illegal, which is to say, a crime against he state. |
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#8
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| Re: Question about Kantian ethics A deontologist would argue that laws should be derived from ethical first principles, and Kant's categorical imperative is sort of the flag-bearer of deontology. You're describing a utilitarian conception of law, in which the law need not have a moral foundation so long as it achieves a desired societal state.
__________________ Forum Links: Rules | User Control Panel |Video Tutorials |Blogs | Social Groups | FAQs "How you get so big eating food of this kind?" -Yoda |
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#9
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| Re: Question about Kantian ethics Quote:
![]() The state has existed long before any of us. The state acts in its own interest and if a citizen, even living unobserved and unchipped in the deep woods even to Google Earth, performs an act reserved to the state, such as violence, the state will view that as a crime, an ursurpation of the power of the state and cannot be allowed. Besides feeling undeserving from that time on, the citizen will be in trouble. |
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#10
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| Re: Question about Kantian ethics I'd like to quickly mention that this thread isn't solely about abortion. Infanticide is another ethical issue this relates to: infants do not yet have the ability of moral deliberation, so they certainly don't fall under the "kingdom of ends." However, if they will be members of the kingdom of ends in the future, doesn't it also give them rights to be treated as ends now? In other words, are you treating future persons as means when you have an abortion, even though the unborn human isn't yet a moral agent? As for Fairbanks, you're essentially advocating moral fascism: primacy of the state over all others. This view is essentially wrong because the state itself is bound to any moral rules imposed on humans, because "the state" as such is not a singular entity, simply an organization consisting of human beings who are bound to the rules of morals. |
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