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1284 lines
96 KiB
Plaintext
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1780
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THE METAPHYSICAL ELEMENTS OF ETHICS
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by Immanuel Kant
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translated by Thomas Kingsmill Abbott
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PREFACE
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If there exists on any subject a philosophy (that is, a system of
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rational knowledge based on concepts), then there must also be for
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this philosophy a system of pure rational concepts, independent of any
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condition of intuition, in other words, a metaphysic. It may be
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asked whether metaphysical elements are required also for every
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practical philosophy, which is the doctrine of duties, and therefore
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also for Ethics, in order to be able to present it as a true science
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(systematically), not merely as an aggregate of separate doctrines
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(fragmentarily). As regards pure jurisprudence, no one will question
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this requirement; for it concerns only what is formal in the
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elective will, which has to be limited in its external relations
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according to laws of freedom; without regarding any end which is the
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matter of this will. Here, therefore, deontology is a mere
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scientific doctrine (doctrina scientiae).*
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*One who is acquainted with practical philosophy is not,
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therefore, a practical philosopher. The latter is he who makes the
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rational end the principle of his actions, while at the same time he
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joins with this the necessary knowledge which, as it aims at action,
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must not be spun out into the most subtile threads of metaphysic,
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unless a legal duty is in question; in which case meum and tuum must
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be accurately determined in the balance of justice, on the principle
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of equality of action and action, which requires something like
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mathematical proportion, but not in the case of a mere ethical duty.
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For in this case the question is not only to know what it is a duty to
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do (a thing which on account of the ends that all men naturally have
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can be easily decided), but the chief point is the inner principle
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of the will namely that the consciousness of this duty be also the
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spring of action, in order that we may be able to say of the man who
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joins to his knowledge this principle of wisdom that he is a practical
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philosopher.
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Now in this philosophy (of ethics) it seems contrary to the idea
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of it that we should go back to metaphysical elements in order to make
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the notion of duty purified from everything empirical (from every
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feeling) a motive of action. For what sort of notion can we form of
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the mighty power and herculean strength which would be sufficient to
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overcome the vice-breeding inclinations, if Virtue is to borrow her
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"arms from the armoury of metaphysics," which is a matter of
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speculation that only few men can handle? Hence all ethical teaching
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in lecture rooms, pulpits, and popular books, when it is decked out
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with fragments of metaphysics, becomes ridiculous. But it is not,
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therefore, useless, much less ridiculous, to trace in metaphysics
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the first principles of ethics; for it is only as a philosopher that
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anyone can reach the first principles of this conception of duty,
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otherwise we could not look for either certainty or purity in the
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ethical teaching. To rely for this reason on a certain feeling
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which, on account of the effect expected from it, is called moral,
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may, perhaps, even satisfy the popular teacher, provided he desires as
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the criterion of a moral duty to consider the problem: "If everyone in
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every case made your maxim the universal law, how could this law be
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consistent with itself?" But if it were merely feeling that made it
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our duty to take this principle as a criterion, then this would not be
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dictated by reason, but only adopted instinctively and therefore
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blindly.
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But in fact, whatever men imagine, no moral principle is based on
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any feeling, but such a principle is really nothing else than an
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obscurely conceived metaphysic which inheres in every man's
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reasoning faculty; as the teacher will easily find who tries to
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catechize his pupils in the Socratic method about the imperative of
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duty and its application to the moral judgement of his actions. The
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mode of stating it need not be always metaphysical, and the language
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need not necessarily be scholastic, unless the pupil is to be
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trained to be a philosopher. But the thought must go back to the
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elements of metaphysics, without which we cannot expect any
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certainty or purity, or even motive power in ethics.
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If we deviate from this principle and begin from pathological, or
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purely sensitive, or even moral feeling (from what is subjectively
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practical instead of what is objective), that is, from the matter of
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the will, the end, not from its form that is the law, in order from
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thence to determine duties; then, certainly, there are no metaphysical
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elements of ethics, for feeling by whatever it may be excited is
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always physical. But then ethical teaching, whether in schools, or
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lecture-rooms, etc., is corrupted in its source. For it is not a
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matter of indifference by what motives or means one is led to a good
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purpose (the obedience to duty). However disgusting, then, metaphysics
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may appear to those pretended philosophers who dogmatize oracularly,
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or even brilliantly, about the doctrine of duty, it is,
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nevertheless, an indispensable duty for those who oppose it to go back
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to its principles even in ethics, and to begin by going to school on
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its benches.
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We may fairly wonder how, after all previous explanations of the
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principles of duty, so far as it is derived from pure reason, it was
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still possible to reduce it again to a doctrine of happiness; in
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such a way, however, that a certain moral happiness not resting on
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empirical causes was ultimately arrived at, a self-contradictory
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nonentity. In fact, when the thinking man has conquered the
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temptations to vice, and is conscious of having done his (often
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hard) duty, he finds himself in a state of peace and satisfaction
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which may well be called happiness, in which virtue is her own reward.
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Now, says the eudaemonist, this delight, this happiness, is the real
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motive of his acting virtuously. The notion of duty, says be, does not
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immediately determine his will; it is only by means of the happiness
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in prospect that he is moved to his duty. Now, on the other hand,
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since he can promise himself this reward of virtue only from the
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consciousness of having done his duty, it is clear that the latter
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must have preceded: that is, be must feel himself bound to do his duty
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before he thinks, and without thinking, that happiness will be the
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consequence of obedience to duty. He is thus involved in a circle in
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his assignment of cause and effect. He can only hope to be happy if he
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is conscious of his obedience to duty: and he can only be moved to
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obedience to duty if be foresees that he will thereby become happy.
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But in this reasoning there is also a contradiction. For, on the one
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side, he must obey his duty, without asking what effect this will have
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on his happiness, consequently, from a moral principle; on the other
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side, he can only recognize something as his duty when he can reckon
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on happiness which will accrue to him thereby, and consequently on a
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pathological principle, which is the direct opposite of the former.
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I have in another place (the Berlin Monatsschrift), reduced, as I
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believe, to the simplest expressions the distinction between
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pathological and moral pleasure. The pleasure, namely, which must
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precede the obedience to the law in order that one may act according
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to the law is pathological, and the process follows the physical order
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of nature; that which must be preceded by the law in order that it may
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be felt is in the moral order. If this distinction is not observed; if
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eudaemonism (the principle of happiness) is adopted as the principle
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instead of eleutheronomy (the principle of freedom of the inner
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legislation), the consequence is the euthanasia (quiet death) of all
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morality.
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The cause of these mistakes is no other than the following: Those
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who are accustomed only to physiological explanations will not admit
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into their heads the categorical imperative from which these laws
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dictatorially proceed, notwithstanding that they feel themselves
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irresistibly forced by it. Dissatisfied at not being able to explain
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what lies wholly beyond that sphere, namely, freedom of the elective
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will, elevating as is this privilege, that man has of being capable of
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such an idea. They are stirred up by the proud claims of speculative
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reason, which feels its power so strongly in the fields, just as if
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they were allies leagued in defence of the omnipotence of
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theoretical reason and roused by a general call to arms to resist that
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idea; and thus they are at present, and perhaps for a long time to
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come, though ultimately in vain, to attack the moral concept of
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freedom and if possible render it doubtful.
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INTRODUCTION
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INTRODUCTION TO THE METAPHYSICAL ELEMENTS OF ETHICS
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Ethics in ancient times signified moral philosophy (philosophia
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moral is) generally, which was also called the doctrine of duties.
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Subsequently it was found advisable to confine this name to a part
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of moral philosophy, namely, to the doctrine of duties which are not
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subject to external laws (for which in German the name Tugendlehre was
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found suitable). Thus the system of general deontology is divided into
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that of jurisprudence (jurisprudentia), which is capable of external
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laws, and of ethics, which is not thus capable, and we may let this
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division stand.
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I. Exposition of the Conception of Ethics
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The notion of duty is in itself already the notion of a constraint
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of the free elective will by the law; whether this constraint be an
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external one or be self-constraint. The moral imperative, by its
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categorical (the unconditional ought) announces this constraint, which
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therefore does not apply to all rational beings (for there may also be
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holy beings), but applies to men as rational physical beings who are
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unholy enough to be seduced by pleasure to the transgression of the
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moral law, although they themselves recognize its authority; and
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when they do obey it, to obey it unwillingly (with resistance of their
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inclination); and it is in this that the constraint properly
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consists.* Now, as man is a free (moral) being, the notion of duty can
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contain only self-constraint (by the idea of the law itself), when
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we look to the internal determination of the will (the spring), for
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thus only is it possible to combine that constraint (even if it were
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external) with the freedom of the elective will. The notion of duty
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then must be an ethical one.
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*Man, however, as at the same time a moral being, when he
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considers himself objectively, which he is qualified to do by his pure
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practical reason, (i.e., according to humanity in his own person).
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finds himself holy enough to transgress the law only unwillingly;
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for there is no man so depraved who in this transgression would not
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feel a resistance and an abhorrence of himself, so that he must put
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a force on himself. It is impossible to explain the phenomenon that at
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this parting of the ways (where the beautiful fable places Hercules
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between virtue and sensuality) man shows more propensity to obey
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inclination than the law. For, we can only explain what happens by
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tracing it to a cause according to physical laws; but then we should
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not be able to conceive the elective will as free. Now this mutually
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opposed self-constraint and the inevitability of it makes us recognize
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the incomprehensible property of freedom.
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The impulses of nature, then, contain hindrances to the fulfilment
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of duty in the mind of man, and resisting forces, some of them
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powerful; and he must judge himself able to combat these and to
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conquer them by means of reason, not in the future, but in the
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present, simultaneously with the thought; he must judge that he can do
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what the law unconditionally commands that be ought.
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Now the power and resolved purpose to resist a strong but unjust
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opponent is called fortitude (fortitudo), and when concerned with
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the opponent of the moral character within us, it is virtue (virtus,
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fortitudo moralis). Accordingly, general deontology, in that part
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which brings not external, but internal, freedom under laws is the
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doctrine of virtue.
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Jurisprudence had to do only with the formal condition of external
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freedom (the condition of consistency with itself, if its maxim became
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a universal law), that is, with law. Ethics, on the contrary, supplies
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us with a matter (an object of the free elective will), an end of pure
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reason which is at the same time conceived as an objectively necessary
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end, i.e., as duty for all men. For, as the sensible inclinations
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mislead us to ends (which are the matter of the elective will) that
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may contradict duty, the legislating reason cannot otherwise guard
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against their influence than by an opposite moral end, which therefore
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must be given a priori independently on inclination.
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An end is an object of the elective will (of a rational being) by
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the idea of which this will is determined to an action for the
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production of this object. Now I may be forced by others to actions
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which are directed to an end as means, but I cannot be forced to
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have an end; I can only make something an end to myself. If,
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however, I am also bound to make something which lies in the notions
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of practical reason an end to myself, and therefore besides the formal
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determining principle of the elective will (as contained in law) to
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have also a material principle, an end which can be opposed to the end
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derived from sensible impulses; then this gives the notion of an end
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which is in itself a duty. The doctrine of this cannot belong to
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jurisprudence, but to ethics, since this alone includes in its
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conception self-constraint according to moral laws.
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For this reason, ethics may also be defined as the system of the
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ends of the pure practical reason. The two parts of moral philosophy
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are distinguished as treating respectively of ends and of duties of
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constraint. That ethics contains duties to the observance of which one
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cannot be (physically) forced by others, is merely the consequence
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of this, that it is a doctrine of ends, since to be forced to have
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ends or to set them before one's self is a contradiction.
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Now that ethics is a doctrine of virtue (doctrina officiorum
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virtutis) follows from the definition of virtue given above compared
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with the obligation, the peculiarity of which has just been shown.
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There is in fact no other determination of the elective will, except
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that to an end, which in the very notion of it implies that I cannot
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even physically be forced to it by the elective will of others.
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Another may indeed force me to do something which is not my end (but
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only means to the end of another), but he cannot force me to make it
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my own end, and yet I can have no end except of my own making. The
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latter supposition would be a contradiction- an act of freedom which
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yet at the same time would not be free. But there is no
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contradiction in setting before one's self an end which is also a
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duty: for in this case I constrain myself, and this is quite
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consistent with freedom.* But how is such an end possible? That is now
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the question. For the possibility of the notion of the thing (viz.,
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that it is not self-contradictory) is not enough to prove the
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possibility of the thing itself (the objective reality of the notion).
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*The less a man can be physically forced, and the more he can be
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morally forced (by the mere idea of duty), so much the freer he is.
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The man, for example, who is of sufficiently firm resolution and
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strong mind not to give up an enjoyment which he has resolved on,
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however much loss is shown as resulting therefrom, and who yet desists
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from his purpose unhesitatingly, though very reluctantly, when he
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finds that it would cause him to neglect an official duty or a sick
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father; this man proves his freedom in the highest degree by this very
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thing, that he cannot resist the voice of duty.
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II. Exposition of the Notion of an End which is also a Duty
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We can conceive the relation of end to duty in two ways; either
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starting from the end to find the maxim of the dutiful actions; or
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conversely, setting out from this to find the end which is also
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duty. jurisprudence proceeds in the former way. It is left to
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everyone's free elective will what end he will choose for his
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action. But its maxim is determined a priori; namely, that the freedom
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of the agent must be consistent with the freedom of every other
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according to a universal law.
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Ethics, however, proceeds in the opposite way. It cannot start
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from the ends which the man may propose to himself, and hence give
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directions as to the maxims he should adopt, that is, as to his
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duty; for that would be to take empirical principles of maxims, and
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these could not give any notion of duty; since this, the categorical
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ought, has its root in pure reason alone. Indeed, if the maxims were
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to be adopted in accordance with those ends (which are all selfish),
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we could not properly speak of the notion of duty at all. Hence in
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ethics the notion of duty must lead to ends, and must on moral
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principles give the foundation of maxims with respect to the ends
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which we ought to propose to ourselves.
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Setting aside the question what sort of end that is which is in
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itself a duty, and how such an end is possible, it is here only
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necessary to show that a duty of this kind is called a duty of virtue,
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and why it is so called.
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To every duty corresponds a right of action (facultas moral is
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generatim), but all duties do not imply a corresponding right
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(facultas juridica) of another to compel any one, but only the
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duties called legal duties. Similarly to all ethical obligation
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corresponds the notion of virtue, but it does not follow that all
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ethical duties are duties of virtue. Those, in fact, are not so
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which do not concern so much a certain end (matter, object of the
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elective will), but merely that which is formal in the moral
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determination of the will (e.g., that the dutiful action must also
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be done from duty). It is only an end which is also duty that can be
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called a duty of virtue. Hence there are several of the latter kind
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(and thus there are distinct virtues); on the contrary, there is
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only one duty of the former kind, but it is one which is valid for all
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actions (only one virtuous disposition).
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The duty of virtue is essentially distinguished from the duty of
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justice in this respect; that it is morally possible to be
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externally compelled to the latter, whereas the former rests on free
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self-constraint only. For finite holy beings (which cannot even be
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tempted to the violation of duty) there is no doctrine of virtue,
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but only moral philosophy, the latter being an autonomy of practical
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reason, whereas the former is also an autocracy of it. That is, it
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includes a consciousness- not indeed immediately perceived, but
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rightly concluded, from the moral categorical imperative- of the power
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to become master of one's inclinations which resist the law; so that
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human morality in its highest stage can yet be nothing more than
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virtue; even if it were quite pure (perfectly free from the
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influence of a spring foreign to duty), a state which is poetically
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personified under the name of the wise man (as an ideal to which one
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should continually approximate).
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Virtue, however, is not to be defined and esteemed merely as
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habit, and (as it is expressed in the prize essay of Cochius) as a
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long custom acquired by practice of morally good actions. For, if this
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is not an effect of well-resolved and firm principles ever more and
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more purified, then, like any other mechanical arrangement brought
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about by technical practical reason, it is neither armed for all
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circumstances nor adequately secured against the change that may be
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wrought by new allurements.
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REMARK
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To virtue = + a is opposed as its logical contradictory
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(contradictorie oppositum) the negative lack of virtue (moral
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weakness) = o; but vice = a is its contrary (contrarie s. realiter
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oppositum); and it is not merely a needless question but an
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offensive one to ask whether great crimes do not perhaps demand more
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strength of mind than great virtues. For by strength of mind we
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understand the strength of purpose of a man, as a being endowed with
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freedom, and consequently so far as he is master of himself (in his
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senses) and therefore in a healthy condition of mind. But great crimes
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are paroxysms, the very sight of which makes the man of healthy mind
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shudder. The question would therefore be something like this:
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whether a man in a fit of madness can have more physical strength than
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if he is in his senses; and we may admit this without on that
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account ascribing to him more strength of mind, if by mind we
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understand the vital principle of man in the free use of his powers.
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For since those crimes have their ground merely in the power of the
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inclinations that weaken reason, which does not prove strength of
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mind, this question would be nearly the same as the question whether a
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man in a fit of illness can show more strength than in a healthy
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condition; and this may be directly denied, since the want of
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health, which consists in the proper balance of all the bodily
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forces of the man, is a weakness in the system of these forces, by
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which system alone we can estimate absolute health.
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III. Of the Reason for conceiving an End which is also a Duty
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An end is an object of the free elective will, the idea of which
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determines this will to an action by which the object is produced.
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Accordingly every action has its end, and as no one can have an end
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without himself making the object of his elective will his end,
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hence to have some end of actions is an act of the freedom of the
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agent, not an affect of physical nature. Now, since this act which
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determines an end is a practical principle which commands not the
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means (therefore not conditionally) but the end itself (therefore
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unconditionally), hence it is a categorical imperative of pure
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practical reason and one, therefore, which combines a concept of
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duty with that of an end in general.
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Now there must be such an end and a categorical imperative
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corresponding to it. For since there are free actions, there must also
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be ends to which as an object those actions are directed. Amongst
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these ends there must also be some which are at the same time (that
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is, by their very notion) duties. For if there were none such, then
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since no actions can be without an end, all ends which practical
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reason might have would be valid only as means to other ends, and a
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categorical imperative would be impossible; a supposition which
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destroys all moral philosophy.
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Here, therefore, we treat not of ends which man actually makes to
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himself in accordance with the sensible impulses of his nature, but of
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objects of the free elective will under its own laws- objects which he
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ought to make his end. We may call the former technical
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(subjective), properly pragmatical, including the rules of prudence in
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the choice of its ends; but the latter we must call the moral
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(objective) doctrine of ends. This distinction is, however,
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superfluous here, since moral philosophy already by its very notion is
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clearly separated from the doctrine of physical nature (in the present
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instance, anthropology). The latter resting on empirical principles,
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whereas the moral doctrine of ends which treats of duties rests on
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principles given a priori in pure practical reason.
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-
|
|
IV. What are the Ends which are also Duties?
|
|
-
|
|
They are: A. OUR OWN PERFECTION, B. HAPPINESS OF OTHERS.
|
|
We cannot invert these and make on one side our own happiness, and
|
|
on the other the perfection of others, ends which should be in
|
|
themselves duties for the same person.
|
|
For one's own happiness is, no doubt, an end that all men have (by
|
|
virtue of the impulse of their nature), but this end cannot without
|
|
contradiction be regarded as a duty. What a man of himself
|
|
inevitably wills does not come under the notion of duty, for this is a
|
|
constraint to an end reluctantly adopted. It is, therefore, a
|
|
contradiction to say that a man is in duty bound to advance his own
|
|
happiness with all his power.
|
|
It is likewise a contradiction to make the perfection of another
|
|
my end, and to regard myself as in duty bound to promote it. For it is
|
|
just in this that the perfection of another man as a person
|
|
consists, namely, that he is able of himself to set before him his own
|
|
end according to his own notions of duty; and it is a contradiction to
|
|
require (to make it a duty for me) that I should do something which no
|
|
other but himself can do.
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
V. Explanation of these two Notions
|
|
-
|
|
A. OUR OWN PERFECTION
|
|
-
|
|
The word perfection is liable to many misconceptions. It is
|
|
sometimes understood as a notion belonging to transcendental
|
|
philosophy; viz., the notion of the totality of the manifold which
|
|
taken together constitutes a thing; sometimes, again, it is understood
|
|
as belonging to teleology, so that it signifies the correspondence
|
|
of the properties of a thing to an end. Perfection in the former sense
|
|
might be called quantitative (material), in the latter qualitative
|
|
(formal) perfection. The former can be one only, for the whole of what
|
|
belongs to the one thing is one. But of the latter there may be
|
|
several in one thing; and it is of the latter property that we here
|
|
treat.
|
|
When it is said of the perfection that belongs to man generally
|
|
(properly speaking, to humanity), that it is in itself a duty to
|
|
make this our end, it must be placed in that which may be the effect
|
|
of one's deed, not in that which is merely an endowment for which we
|
|
have to thank nature; for otherwise it would not be duty.
|
|
Consequently, it can be nothing else than the cultivation of one's
|
|
power (or natural capacity) and also of one's will (moral disposition)
|
|
to satisfy the requirement of duty in general. The supreme element
|
|
in the former (the power) is the understanding, it being the faculty
|
|
of concepts, and, therefore, also of those concepts which refer to
|
|
duty. First it is his duty to labour to raise himself out of the
|
|
rudeness of his nature, out of his animal nature more and more to
|
|
humanity, by which alone he is capable of setting before him ends to
|
|
supply the defects of his ignorance by instruction, and to correct his
|
|
errors; he is not merely counselled to do this by reason as
|
|
technically practical, with a view to his purposes of other kinds
|
|
(as art), but reason, as morally practical, absolutely commands him to
|
|
do it, and makes this end his duty, in order that he may be worthy
|
|
of the humanity that dwells in him. Secondly, to carry the cultivation
|
|
of his will up to the purest virtuous disposition, that, namely, in
|
|
which the law is also the spring of his dutiful actions, and to obey
|
|
it from duty, for this is internal morally practical perfection.
|
|
This is called the moral sense (as it were a special sense, sensus
|
|
moralis), because it is a feeling of the effect which the
|
|
legislative will within himself exercises on the faculty of acting
|
|
accordingly. This is, indeed, often misused fanatically, as though
|
|
(like the genius of Socrates) it preceded reason, or even could
|
|
dispense with judgement of reason; but still it is a moral perfection,
|
|
making every special end, which is also a duty, one's own end.
|
|
-
|
|
B. HAPPINESS OF OTHERS
|
|
-
|
|
It is inevitable for human nature that a should wish and seek for
|
|
happiness, that is, satisfaction with his condition, with certainty of
|
|
the continuance of this satisfaction. But for this very reason it is
|
|
not an end that is also a duty. Some writers still make a
|
|
distinction between moral and physical happiness (the former
|
|
consisting in satisfaction with one's person and moral behaviour, that
|
|
is, with what one does; the other in satisfaction with that which
|
|
nature confers, consequently with what one enjoys as a foreign
|
|
gift). Without at present censuring the misuse of the word (which even
|
|
involves a contradiction), it must be observed that the feeling of the
|
|
former belongs solely to the preceding head, namely, perfection. For
|
|
he who is to feel himself happy in the mere consciousness of his
|
|
uprightness already possesses that perfection which in the previous
|
|
section was defined as that end which is also duty.
|
|
If happiness, then, is in question, which it is to be my duty to
|
|
promote as my end, it must be the happiness of other men whose
|
|
(permitted) end I hereby make also mine. It still remains left to
|
|
themselves to decide what they shall reckon as belonging to their
|
|
happiness; only that it is in my power to decline many things which
|
|
they so reckon, but which I do not so regard, supposing that they have
|
|
no right to demand it from me as their own. A plausible objection
|
|
often advanced against the division of duties above adopted consists
|
|
in setting over against that end a supposed obligation to study my own
|
|
(physical) happiness, and thus making this, which is my natural and
|
|
merely subjective end, my duty (and objective end). This requires to
|
|
be cleared up.
|
|
Adversity, pain, and want are great temptations to transgression
|
|
of one's duty; accordingly it would seem that strength, health, a
|
|
competence, and welfare generally, which are opposed to that
|
|
influence, may also be regarded as ends that are also duties; that is,
|
|
that it is a duty to promote our own happiness not merely to make that
|
|
of others our end. But in that case the end is not happiness but the
|
|
morality of the agent; and happiness is only the means of removing the
|
|
hindrances to morality; permitted means, since no one bas a right to
|
|
demand from me the sacrifice of my not immoral ends. It is not
|
|
directly a duty to seek a competence for one's self; but indirectly it
|
|
may be so; namely, in order to guard against poverty which is a
|
|
great temptation to vice. But then it is not my happiness but my
|
|
morality, to maintain which in its integrity is at once my end and
|
|
my duty.
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
VI. Ethics does not supply Laws for Actions (which is done by
|
|
Jurisprudence), but only for the Maxims of Action
|
|
-
|
|
The notion of duty stands in immediate relation to a law (even
|
|
though I abstract from every end which is the matter of the law); as
|
|
is shown by the formal principle of duty in the categorical
|
|
imperative: "Act so that the maxims of thy action might become a
|
|
universal law." But in ethics this is conceived as the law of thy
|
|
own will, not of will in general, which might be that of others; for
|
|
in the latter case it would give rise to a judicial duty which does
|
|
not belong to the domain of ethics. In ethics, maxims are regarded
|
|
as those subjective laws which merely have the specific character of
|
|
universal legislation, which is only a negative principle (not to
|
|
contradict a law in general). How, then, can there be further a law
|
|
for the maxims of actions?
|
|
It is the notion of an end which is also a duty, a notion peculiar
|
|
to ethics, that alone is the foundation of a law for the maxims of
|
|
actions; by making the subjective end (that which every one has)
|
|
subordinate to the objective end (that which every one ought to make
|
|
his own). The imperative: "Thou shalt make this or that thy end (e.
|
|
g., the happiness of others)" applies to the matter of the elective
|
|
will (an object). Now since no free action is possible, without the
|
|
agent having in view in it some end (as matter of his elective
|
|
will), it follows that, if there is an end which is also a duty, the
|
|
maxims of actions which are means to ends must contain only the
|
|
condition of fitness for a possible universal legislation: on the
|
|
other hand, the end which is also a duty can make it a law that we
|
|
should have such a maxim, whilst for the maxim itself the
|
|
possibility of agreeing with a universal legislation is sufficient.
|
|
For maxims of actions may be arbitrary, and are only limited by
|
|
the condition of fitness for a universal legislation, which is the
|
|
formal principle of actions. But a law abolishes the arbitrary
|
|
character of actions, and is by this distinguished from recommendation
|
|
(in which one only desires to know the best means to an end).
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
VII. Ethical Duties are of indeterminate, Juridical Duties of
|
|
strict, Obligation
|
|
-
|
|
This proposition is a consequence of the foregoing; for if the law
|
|
can only command the maxim of the actions, not the actions themselves,
|
|
this is a sign that it leaves in the observance of it a latitude
|
|
(latitudo) for the elective will; that is, it cannot definitely assign
|
|
how and how much we should do by the action towards the end which is
|
|
also duty. But by an indeterminate duty is not meant a permission to
|
|
make exceptions from the maxim of the actions, but only the permission
|
|
to limit one maxim of duty by another (e. g., the general love of
|
|
our neighbour by the love of parents); and this in fact enlarges the
|
|
field for the practice of virtue. The more indeterminate the duty, and
|
|
the more imperfect accordingly the obligation of the man to the
|
|
action, and the closer he nevertheless brings this maxim of
|
|
obedience thereto (in his own mind) to the strict duty (of justice),
|
|
so much the more perfect is his virtuous action.
|
|
Hence it is only imperfect duties that are duties of virtue. The
|
|
fulfilment of them is merit (meritum) = + a; but their transgression
|
|
is not necessarily demerit (demeritum) = - a, but only moral unworth
|
|
= o, unless the agent made it a principle not to conform to those
|
|
duties. The strength of purpose in the former case is alone properly
|
|
called virtue [Tugend] (virtus); the weakness in the latter case is
|
|
not vice (vitium), but rather only lack of virtue [Untugend], a want
|
|
of moral strength (defectus moralis). (As the word Tugend is derived
|
|
from taugen [to be good for something], Untugend by its etymology
|
|
signifies good for nothing.) Every action contrary to duty is called
|
|
transgression (peccatum). Deliberate transgression which has become
|
|
a principle is what properly constitutes what is called vice (vitium).
|
|
Although the conformity of actions to justice (i.e., to be an
|
|
upright man) is nothing meritorious, yet the conformity of the maxim
|
|
of such actions regarded as duties, that is, reverence for justice
|
|
is meritorious. For by this the man makes the right of humanity or
|
|
of men his own end, and thereby enlarges his notion of duty beyond
|
|
that of indebtedness (officium debiti), since although another man
|
|
by virtue of his rights can demand that my actions shall conform to
|
|
the law, he cannot demand that the law shall also contain the spring
|
|
of these actions. The same thing is true of the general ethical
|
|
command, "Act dutifully from a sense of duty." To fix this disposition
|
|
firmly in one's mind and to quicken it is, as in the former case,
|
|
meritorious, because it goes beyond the law of duty in actions and
|
|
makes the law in itself the spring.
|
|
But just for or reason, those duties also must be reckoned as of
|
|
indeterminate obligation, in respect of which there exists a
|
|
subjective principle which ethically rewards them; or to bring them as
|
|
near as possible to the notion of a strict obligation, a principle
|
|
of susceptibility of this reward according to the law of virtue;
|
|
namely, a moral pleasure which goes beyond mere satisfaction with
|
|
oneself (which may be merely negative), and of which it is proudly
|
|
said that in this consciousness virtue is its own reward.
|
|
When this merit is a merit of the man in respect of other men of
|
|
promoting their natural ends, which are recognized as such by all
|
|
men (making their happiness his own), we might call it the sweet
|
|
merit, the consciousness of which creates a moral enjoyment in which
|
|
men are by sympathy inclined to revel; whereas the bitter merit of
|
|
promoting the true welfare of other men, even though they should not
|
|
recognize it as such (in the case of the unthankful and ungrateful),
|
|
has commonly no such reaction, but only produces a satisfaction with
|
|
one's self, although in the latter case this would be even greater.
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
VIII. Exposition of the Duties of Virtue as Intermediate Duties
|
|
-
|
|
(1) OUR OWN PERFECTION as an end which is also a duty
|
|
(a) Physical perfection; that is, cultivation of all our faculties
|
|
generally for the promotion of the ends set before us by reason.
|
|
That this is a duty, and therefore an end in itself, and that the
|
|
effort to effect this even without regard to the advantage that it
|
|
secures us, is based, not on a conditional (pragmatic), but an
|
|
unconditional (moral) imperative, may be seen from the following
|
|
consideration. The power of proposing to ourselves an end is the
|
|
characteristic of humanity (as distinguished from the brutes). With
|
|
the end of humanity in our own person is therefore combined the
|
|
rational will, and consequently the duty of deserving well of humanity
|
|
by culture generally, by acquiring or advancing the power to carry out
|
|
all sorts of possible ends, so far as this power is to be found in
|
|
man; that is, it is a duty to cultivate the crude capacities of our
|
|
nature, since it is by that cultivation that the animal is raised to
|
|
man, therefore it is a duty in itself.
|
|
This duty, however, is merely ethical, that is, of indeterminate
|
|
obligation. No principle of reason prescribes how far one must go in
|
|
this effort (in enlarging or correcting his faculty of
|
|
understanding, that is, in acquisition of knowledge or technical
|
|
capacity); and besides the difference in the circumstances into
|
|
which men may come makes the choice of the kind of employment for
|
|
which he should cultivate his talent very arbitrary. Here,
|
|
therefore, there is no law of reason for actions, but only for the
|
|
maxim of actions, viz.: "Cultivate thy faculties of mind and body so
|
|
as to be effective for all ends that may come in thy way, uncertain
|
|
which of them may become thy own."
|
|
(b) Cultivation of Morality in ourselves. The greatest moral
|
|
perfection of man is to do his duty, and that from duty (that the
|
|
law be not only the rule but also the spring of his actions). Now at
|
|
first sight this seems to be a strict obligation, and as if the
|
|
principle of duty commanded not merely the legality of every action,
|
|
but also the morality, i.e., the mental disposition, with the
|
|
exactness and strictness of a law; but in fact the law commands even
|
|
here only the maxim of the action, namely, that we should seek the
|
|
ground of obligation, not in the sensible impulses (advantage or
|
|
disadvantage), but wholly in the law; so that the action itself is not
|
|
commanded. For it is not possible to man to see so far into the
|
|
depth of his own heart that he could ever be thoroughly certain of the
|
|
purity of his moral purpose and the sincerity of his mind even in
|
|
one single action, although he has no doubt about the legality of
|
|
it. Nay, often the weakness which deters a man from the risk of a
|
|
crime is regarded by him as virtue (which gives the notion of
|
|
strength). And how many there are who may have led a long blameless
|
|
life, who are only fortunate in having escaped so many temptations.
|
|
How much of the element of pure morality in their mental disposition
|
|
may have belonged to each deed remains hidden even from themselves.
|
|
Accordingly, this duty to estimate the worth of one's actions not
|
|
merely by their legality, but also by their morality (mental
|
|
disposition), is only of indeterminate obligation; the law does not
|
|
command this internal action in the human mind itself, but only the
|
|
maxim of the action, namely, that we should strive with all our
|
|
power that for all dutiful actions the thought of duty should be of
|
|
itself an adequate spring.
|
|
(2) HAPPINESS OF OTHERS as an end which is also a duty
|
|
(a) Physical Welfare. Benevolent wishes may be unlimited, for they
|
|
do not imply doing anything. But the case is more difficult with
|
|
benevolent action, especially when this is to be done, not from
|
|
friendly inclination (love) to others, but from duty, at the expense
|
|
of the sacrifice and mortification of many of our appetites. That this
|
|
beneficence is a duty results from this: that since our self-love
|
|
cannot be separated from the need to be loved by others (to obtain
|
|
help from them in case of necessity), we therefore make ourselves an
|
|
end for others; and this maxim can never be obligatory except by
|
|
having the specific character of a universal law, and consequently
|
|
by means of a will that we should also make others our ends. Hence the
|
|
happiness of others is an end that is also a duty.
|
|
I am only bound then to sacrifice to others a part of my welfare
|
|
without hope of recompense: because it is my duty, and it is
|
|
impossible to assign definite limits how far that may go. Much depends
|
|
on what would be the true want of each according to his own
|
|
feelings, and it must be left to each to determine this for himself.
|
|
For that one should sacrifice his own happiness, his true wants, in
|
|
order to promote that of others, would be a self-contradictory maxim
|
|
if made a universal law. This duty, therefore, is only
|
|
indeterminate; it has a certain latitude within which one may do
|
|
more or less without our being able to assign its limits definitely.
|
|
The law holds only for the maxims, not for definite actions.
|
|
(b) Moral well-being of others (salus moral is) also belongs to
|
|
the happiness of others, which it is our duty to promote, but only a
|
|
negative duty. The pain that a man feels from remorse of conscience,
|
|
although its origin is moral, is yet in its operation physical, like
|
|
grief, fear, and every other diseased condition. To take care that
|
|
he should not be deservedly smitten by this inward reproach is not
|
|
indeed my duty but his business; nevertheless, it is my duty to do
|
|
nothing which by the nature of man might seduce him to that for
|
|
which his conscience may hereafter torment him, that is, it is my duty
|
|
not to give him occasion of stumbling. But there are no definite
|
|
limits within which this care for the moral satisfaction of others
|
|
must be kept; therefore it involves only an indeterminate obligation.
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
IX. What is a Duty of Virtue?
|
|
-
|
|
Virtue is the strength of the man's maxim in his obedience to
|
|
duty. All strength is known only by the obstacles that it can
|
|
overcome; and in the case of virtue the obstacles are the natural
|
|
inclinations which may come into conflict with the moral purpose;
|
|
and as it is the man who himself puts these obstacles in the way of
|
|
his maxims, hence virtue is not merely a self-constraint (for that
|
|
might be an effort of one inclination to constrain another), but is
|
|
also a constraint according to a principle of inward freedom, and
|
|
therefore by the mere idea of duty, according to its formal law.
|
|
All duties involve a notion of necessitation by the law, and ethical
|
|
duties involve a necessitation for which only an internal
|
|
legislation is possible; juridical duties, on the other hand, one
|
|
for which external legislation also is possible. Both, therefore,
|
|
include the notion of constraint, either self-constraint or constraint
|
|
by others. The moral power of the former is virtue, and the action
|
|
springing from such a disposition (from reverence for the law) may
|
|
be called a virtuous action (ethical), although the law expresses a
|
|
juridical duty. For it is the doctrine of virtue that commands us to
|
|
regard the rights of men as holy.
|
|
But it does not follow that everything the doing of which is virtue,
|
|
is, properly speaking, a duty of virtue. The former may concern merely
|
|
the form of the maxims; the latter applies to the matter of them,
|
|
namely, to an end which is also conceived as duty. Now, as the ethical
|
|
obligation to ends, of which there may be many, is only indeterminate,
|
|
because it contains only a law for the maxim of actions, and the end
|
|
is the matter (object) of elective will; hence there are many
|
|
duties, differing according to the difference of lawful ends, which
|
|
may be called duties of virtue (officia honestatis), just because they
|
|
are subject only to free self-constraint, not to the constraint of
|
|
other men, and determine the end which is also a duty.
|
|
Virtue, being a coincidence of the rational will, with every duty
|
|
firmly settled in the character, is, like everything formal, only
|
|
one and the same. But, as regards the end of actions, which is also
|
|
duty, that is, as regards the matter which one ought to make an end,
|
|
there may be several virtues; and as the obligation to its maxim is
|
|
called a duty of virtue, it follows that there are also several duties
|
|
of virtue.
|
|
The supreme principle of ethics (the doctrine of virtue) is: "Act on
|
|
a maxim, the ends of which are such as it might be a universal law for
|
|
everyone to have." On this principle a man is an end to himself as
|
|
well as others, and it is not enough that he is not permitted to use
|
|
either himself or others merely as means (which would imply that be
|
|
might be indifferent to them), but it is in itself a duty of every man
|
|
to make mankind in general his end.
|
|
The principle of ethics being a categorical imperative does not
|
|
admit of proof, but it admits of a justification from principles of
|
|
pure practical reason. Whatever in relation to mankind, to oneself,
|
|
and others, can be an end, that is an end for pure practical reason:
|
|
for this is a faculty of assigning ends in general; and to be
|
|
indifferent to them, that is, to take no interest in them, is a
|
|
contradiction; since in that case it would not determine the maxims of
|
|
actions (which always involve an end), and consequently would cease to
|
|
be practical reasons. Pure reason, however, cannot command any ends
|
|
a priori, except so far as it declares the same to be also a duty,
|
|
which duty is then cared a duty of virtue.
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
X. The Supreme Principle of Jurisprudence was Analytical; that of
|
|
Ethics is Synthetical
|
|
-
|
|
That external constraint, so far as it withstands that which hinders
|
|
the external freedom that agrees with general laws (as an obstacle
|
|
of the obstacle thereto), can be consistent with ends generally, is
|
|
clear on the principle of contradiction, and I need not go beyond
|
|
the notion of freedom in order to see it, let the end which each may
|
|
be what he will. Accordingly, the supreme principle of jurisprudence
|
|
is an analytical principle. On the contrary the principle of ethics
|
|
goes beyond the notion of external freedom and, by general laws,
|
|
connects further with it an end which it makes a duty. This principle,
|
|
therefore, is synthetic. The possibility of it is contained in the
|
|
deduction (SS ix).
|
|
This enlargement of the notion of duty beyond that of external
|
|
freedom and of its limitation by the merely formal condition of its
|
|
constant harmony; this, I say, in which, instead of constraint from
|
|
without, there is set up freedom within, the power of self-constraint,
|
|
and that not by the help of other inclinations, but by pure
|
|
practical reason (which scorns all such help), consists in this
|
|
fact, which raises it above juridical duty; that by it ends are
|
|
proposed from which jurisprudence altogether abstracts. In the case of
|
|
the moral imperative, and the supposition of freedom which it
|
|
necessarily involves, the law, the power (to fulfil it) and the
|
|
rational will that determines the maxim, constitute all the elements
|
|
that form the notion of juridical duty. But in the imperative, which
|
|
commands the duty of virtue, there is added, besides the notion of
|
|
self-constraint, that of an end; not one that we have, but that we
|
|
ought to have, which, therefore, pure practical reason has in
|
|
itself, whose highest, unconditional end (which, however, continues to
|
|
be duty) consists in this: that virtue is its own end and, by
|
|
deserving well of men, is also its own reward. Herein it shines so
|
|
brightly as an ideal to human perceptions, it seems to cast in the
|
|
shade even holiness itself, which is never tempted to
|
|
transgression.* This, however, is an illusion arising from the fact
|
|
that as we have no measure for the degree of strength, except the
|
|
greatness of the obstacles which might have been overcome (which in
|
|
our case are the inclinations), we are led to mistake the subjective
|
|
conditions of estimation of a magnitude for the objective conditions
|
|
of the magnitude itself. But when compared with human ends, all of
|
|
which have their obstacles to be overcome, it is true that the worth
|
|
of virtue itself, which is its own end, far outweighs the worth of all
|
|
the utility and all the empirical ends and advantages which it may
|
|
have as consequences.
|
|
-
|
|
*So that one might very two well-known lines of Haller thus:
|
|
With all his failings, man is still
|
|
Better than angels void of will.
|
|
-
|
|
We may, indeed, say that man is obliged to virtue (as a moral
|
|
strength). For although the power (facultas) to overcome all
|
|
imposing sensible impulses by virtue of his freedom can and must be
|
|
presupposed, yet this power regarded as strength (robur) is
|
|
something that must be acquired by the moral spring (the idea of the
|
|
law) being elevated by contemplation of the dignity of the pure law of
|
|
reason in us, and at the same time also by exercise.
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
XI. According to the preceding Principles, the Scheme of Duties of
|
|
Virtue may be thus exhibited
|
|
-
|
|
The Material Element of the Duty of Virtue
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
1 2
|
|
Internal Duty of Virtue External Virtue of Duty
|
|
-
|
|
My Own End, The End of Others,
|
|
which is also my the promotion of
|
|
Duty which is also my
|
|
Duty
|
|
-
|
|
(My own (The Happiness
|
|
Perfection) of Others)
|
|
-
|
|
3 4
|
|
The Law which is The End which is
|
|
also Spring also Spring
|
|
-
|
|
On which the On which the
|
|
Morality Legality
|
|
-
|
|
of every free determination of will rests
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
The Formal Element of the Duty of Virtue.
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
XII. Preliminary Notions of the Susceptibility of the Mind for
|
|
Notions of Duty generally
|
|
-
|
|
These are such moral qualities as, when a man does not possess them,
|
|
he is not bound to acquire them. They are: the moral feeling,
|
|
conscience, love of one's neighbour, and respect for ourselves
|
|
(self-esteem). There is no obligation to have these, since they are
|
|
subjective conditions of susceptibility for the notion of duty, not
|
|
objective conditions of morality. They are all sensitive and
|
|
antecedent, but natural capacities of mind (praedispositio) to be
|
|
affected by notions of duty; capacities which it cannot be regarded as
|
|
a duty to have, but which every man has, and by virtue of which he can
|
|
be brought under obligation. The consciousness of them is not of
|
|
empirical origin, but can only follow on that of a moral law, as an
|
|
effect of the same on the mind.
|
|
-
|
|
A. THE MORAL FEELING
|
|
-
|
|
This is the susceptibility for pleasure or displeasure, merely
|
|
from the consciousness of the agreement or disagreement of our
|
|
action with the law of duty. Now, every determination of the
|
|
elective will proceeds from the idea of the possible action through
|
|
the feeling of pleasure or displeasure in taking an interest in it
|
|
or its effect to the deed; and here the sensitive state (the affection
|
|
of the internal sense) is either a pathological or a moral feeling.
|
|
The former is the feeling that precedes the idea of the law, the
|
|
latter that which may follow it.
|
|
Now it cannot be a duty to have a moral feeling, or to acquire it;
|
|
for all consciousness of obligation supposes this feeling in order
|
|
that one may become conscious of the necessitation that lies in the
|
|
notion of duty; but every man (as a moral being) has it originally
|
|
in himself; the obligation, then, can only extend to the cultivation
|
|
of it and the strengthening of it even by admiration of its
|
|
inscrutable origin; and this is effected by showing how it is just, by
|
|
the mere conception of reason, that it is excited most strongly, in
|
|
its own purity and apart from every pathological stimulus; and it is
|
|
improper to call this feeling a moral sense; for the word sense
|
|
generally means a theoretical power of perception directed to an
|
|
object; whereas the moral feeling (like pleasure and displeasure in
|
|
general) is something merely subjective, which supplies no
|
|
knowledge. No man is wholly destitute of moral feeling, for if he were
|
|
totally unsusceptible of this sensation he would be morally dead; and,
|
|
to speak in the language of physicians, if the moral vital force could
|
|
no longer produce any effect on this feeling, then his humanity
|
|
would be dissolved (as it were by chemical laws) into mere animality
|
|
and be irrevocably confounded with the mass of other physical
|
|
beings. But we have no special sense for (moral) good and evil any
|
|
more than for truth, although such expressions are often used; but
|
|
we have a susceptibility of the free elective will for being moved
|
|
by pure practical reason and its law; and it is this that we call
|
|
the moral feeling.
|
|
-
|
|
B. OF CONSCIENCE
|
|
-
|
|
Similarly, conscience is not a thing to be acquired, and it is not a
|
|
duty to acquire it; but every man, as a moral being, has it originally
|
|
within him. To be bound to have a conscience would be as much as to
|
|
say to be under a duty to recognize duties. For conscience is
|
|
practical reason which, in every case of law, holds before a man his
|
|
duty for acquittal or condemnation; consequently it does not refer
|
|
to an object, but only to the subject (affecting the moral feeling
|
|
by its own act); so that it is an inevitable fact, not an obligation
|
|
and duty. When, therefore, it is said, "This man has no conscience,"
|
|
what is meant is that he pays no heed to its dictates. For if he
|
|
really had none, he would not take credit to himself for anything done
|
|
according to duty, nor reproach himself with violation of duty, and
|
|
therefore he would be unable even to conceive the duty of having a
|
|
conscience.
|
|
I pass by the manifold subdivisions of conscience, and only
|
|
observe what follows from what has just been said, namely, that
|
|
there is no such thing as an erring conscience. No doubt it is
|
|
possible sometimes to err in the objective judgement whether something
|
|
is a duty or not; but I cannot err in the subjective whether I have
|
|
compared it with my practical (here judicially acting) reason for
|
|
the purpose of that judgement: for if I erred I would not have
|
|
exercised practical judgement at all, and in that case there is
|
|
neither truth nor error. Unconscientiousness is not want of
|
|
conscience, but the propensity not to heed its judgement. But when a
|
|
man is conscious of having acted according to his conscience, then, as
|
|
far as regards guilt or innocence, nothing more can be required of
|
|
him, only he is bound to enlighten his understanding as to what is
|
|
duty or not; but when it comes or has come to action, then
|
|
conscience speaks involuntarily and inevitably. To act conscientiously
|
|
can, therefore, not be a duty, since otherwise it would be necessary
|
|
to have a second conscience, in order to be conscious of the act of
|
|
the first.
|
|
The duty here is only to cultivate our con. science, to quicken
|
|
our attention to the voice of the internal judge, and to use all means
|
|
to secure obedience to it, and is thus our indirect duty.
|
|
-
|
|
C. OF LOVE TO MEN
|
|
-
|
|
Love is a matter of feeling, not of will or volition, and I cannot
|
|
love because I will to do so, still less because I ought (I cannot
|
|
be necessitated to love); hence there is no such thing as a duty to
|
|
love. Benevolence, however (amor benevolentiae), as a mode of
|
|
action, may be subject to a law of duty. Disinterested benevolence
|
|
is often called (though very improperly) love; even where the
|
|
happiness of the other is not concerned, but the complete and free
|
|
surrender of all one's own ends to the ends of another (even a
|
|
superhuman) being, love is spoken of as being also our duty. But all
|
|
duty is necessitation or constraint, although it may be
|
|
self-constraint according to a law. But what is done from constraint
|
|
is not done from love.
|
|
It is a duty to do good to other men according to our power, whether
|
|
we love them or not, and this duty loses nothing of its weight,
|
|
although we must make the sad remark that our species, alas! is not
|
|
such as to be found particularly worthy of love when we know it more
|
|
closely. Hatred of men, however, is always hateful: even though
|
|
without any active hostility it consists only in complete aversion
|
|
from mankind (the solitary misanthropy). For benevolence still remains
|
|
a duty even towards the manhater, whom one cannot love, but to whom we
|
|
can show kindness.
|
|
To hate vice in men is neither duty nor against duty, but a mere
|
|
feeling of horror of vice, the will having no influence on the feeling
|
|
nor the feeling on the will. Beneficence is a duty. He who often
|
|
practises this, and sees his beneficent purpose succeed, comes at last
|
|
really to love him whom he has benefited. When, therefore, it is said:
|
|
"Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself," this does not mean,
|
|
"Thou shalt first of all love, and by means of this love (in the
|
|
next place) do him good"; but: "Do good to thy neighbour, and this
|
|
beneficence will produce in thee the love of men (as a settled habit
|
|
of inclination to beneficence)."
|
|
The love of complacency (amor complacentiae,) would therefore
|
|
alone be direct. This is a pleasure immediately connected with the
|
|
idea of the existence of an object, and to have a duty to this, that
|
|
is, to be necessitated to find pleasure in a thing, is a
|
|
contradiction.
|
|
-
|
|
D. OF RESPECT
|
|
-
|
|
Respect (reverentia) is likewise something merely subjective; a
|
|
feeling of a peculiar kind not a judgement about an object which it
|
|
would be a duty to effect or to advance. For if considered as duty
|
|
it could only be conceived as such by means of the respect which we
|
|
have for it. To have a duty to this, therefore, would be as much as to
|
|
say to be bound in duty to have a duty. When, therefore, it is said:
|
|
"Man has a duty of self-esteem," this is improperly stated, and we
|
|
ought rather to say: "The law within him inevitably forces from him
|
|
respect for his own being, and this feeling (which is of a peculiar
|
|
kind) is a basis of certain duties, that is, of certain actions
|
|
which may be consistent with his duty to himself." But we cannot say
|
|
that he has a duty of respect for himself; for he must have respect
|
|
for the law within himself, in order to be able to conceive duty at
|
|
all.
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
XIII. General Principles of the Metaphysics of Morals in the
|
|
treatment of Pure Ethics
|
|
-
|
|
First. A duty can have only a single ground of obligation; and if
|
|
two or more proof of it are adduced, this is a certain mark that
|
|
either no valid proof has yet been given, or that there are several
|
|
distinct duties which have been regarded as one.
|
|
For all moral proofs, being philosophical, can only be drawn by
|
|
means of rational knowledge from concepts, not like mathematics,
|
|
through the construction of concepts. The latter science admits a
|
|
variety of proofs of one and the same theorem; because in intuition
|
|
a priori there may be several properties of an object, all of which
|
|
lead back to the very same principle. If, for instance, to prove the
|
|
duty of veracity, an argument is drawn first from the harm that a
|
|
lie causes to other men; another from the worthlessness of a liar
|
|
and the violation of his own self-respect, what is proved in the
|
|
former argument is a duty of benevolence, not of veracity, that is
|
|
to say, not the duty which required to be proved, but a different one.
|
|
Now, if, in giving a variety of proof for one and the same theorem, we
|
|
flatter ourselves that the multitude of reasons will compensate the
|
|
lack of weight in each taken separately, this is a very
|
|
unphilosophical resource, since it betrays trickery and dishonesty;
|
|
for several insufficient proofs placed beside one another do not
|
|
produce certainty, nor even probability. They should advance as reason
|
|
and consequence in a series, up to the sufficient reason, and it is
|
|
only in this way that they can have the force of proof. Yet the former
|
|
is the usual device of the rhetorician.
|
|
Secondly. The difference between virtue and vice cannot be sought in
|
|
the degree in which certain maxims are followed, but only in the
|
|
specific quality of the maxims (their relation to the law). In other
|
|
words, the vaunted principle of Aristotle, that virtue is the mean
|
|
between two vices, is false.* For instance, suppose that good
|
|
management is given as the mean between two vices, prodigality and
|
|
avarice; then its origin as a virtue can neither be defined as the
|
|
gradual diminution of the former vice (by saving), nor as the increase
|
|
of the expenses of the miserly. These vices, in fact, cannot be viewed
|
|
as if they, proceeding as it were in opposite directions, met together
|
|
in good management; but each of them has its own maxim, which
|
|
necessarily contradicts that of the other.
|
|
-
|
|
*The common classical formulae of ethics- medio tutissimus ibis;
|
|
omne mimium vertitur in vitium; est modus in rebus, etc., medium
|
|
tenuere beati; virtus est medium vitiorum et utrinque reductum-
|
|
["You will go most safely in the middle" (Virgil); "Every excess
|
|
develops into a vice"; "There is a mean in all things, etc." (Horace);
|
|
"Happy they who steadily pursue a middle course"; "Virtue is the
|
|
mean between two vices and equally removed from either" (Horace).]-
|
|
contain a poor sort of wisdom, which has no definite principles; for
|
|
this mean between two extremes, who will assign it for me? Avarice (as
|
|
a vice) is not distinguished from frugality (as a virtue) by merely
|
|
being the lat pushed too far; but has a quite different principle;
|
|
(maxim), namely placing the end of economy not in the enjoyment of
|
|
one's means, but in the mere possession of them, renouncing enjoyment;
|
|
just as the vice of prodigality is not to be sought in the excessive
|
|
enjoyment of one's means, but in the bad maxim which makes the use
|
|
of them, without regard to their maintenance, the sole end.
|
|
-
|
|
For the same reason, no vice can be defined as an excess in the
|
|
practice of certain actions beyond what is proper (e.g.,
|
|
Prodigalitas est excessus in consumendis opibus); or, as a less
|
|
exercise of them than is fitting (Avaritia est defectus, etc.). For
|
|
since in this way the degree is left quite undefined, and the question
|
|
whether conduct accords with duty or not, turns wholly on this, such
|
|
an account is of no use as a definition.
|
|
Thirdly. Ethical virtue must not be estimated by the power we
|
|
attribute to man of fulfilling the law; but, conversely, the moral
|
|
power must be estimated by the law, which commands categorically; not,
|
|
therefore, by the empirical knowledge that we have of men as they are,
|
|
but by the rational knowledge how, according to the ideas of humanity,
|
|
they ought to be. These three maxims of the scientific treatment of
|
|
ethics are opposed to the older apophthegms:
|
|
1. There is only one virtue and only one vice.
|
|
2. Virtue is the observance of the mean path between two opposite
|
|
vices.
|
|
3. Virtue (like prudence) must be learned from experience.
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
XIV. Of Virtue in General
|
|
-
|
|
Virtue signifies a moral strength of will. But this does not exhaust
|
|
the notion; for such strength might also belong to a holy (superhuman)
|
|
being, in whom no opposing impulse counteracts the law of his rational
|
|
will; who therefore willingly does everything in accordance with the
|
|
law. Virtue then is the moral strength of a man's will in his
|
|
obedience to duty; and this is a moral necessitation by his own law
|
|
giving reason, inasmuch as this constitutes itself a power executing
|
|
the law. It is not itself a duty, nor is it a duty to possess it
|
|
(otherwise we should be in duty bound to have a duty), but it
|
|
commands, and accompanies its command with a moral constraint (one
|
|
possible by laws of internal freedom). But since this should be
|
|
irresistible, strength is requisite, and the degree of this strength
|
|
can be estimated only by the magnitude of the hindrances which man
|
|
creates for himself, by his inclinations. Vices, the brood of unlawful
|
|
dispositions, are the monsters that he has to combat; wherefore this
|
|
moral strength as fortitude (fortitudo moral is) constitutes the
|
|
greatest and only true martial glory of man; it is also called the
|
|
true wisdom, namely, the practical, because it makes the ultimate
|
|
end of the existence of man on earth its own end. Its possession alone
|
|
makes man free, healthy, rich, a king, etc., nor either chance or fate
|
|
deprive him of this, since he possesses himself, and the virtuous
|
|
cannot lose his virtue.
|
|
All the encomiums bestowed on the ideal of humanity in its moral
|
|
perfection can lose nothing of their practical reality by the examples
|
|
of what men now are, have been, or will probably be hereafter;
|
|
anthropology which proceeds from mere empirical knowledge cannot
|
|
impair anthroponomy which is erected by the unconditionally
|
|
legislating reason; and although virtue may now and then be called
|
|
meritorious (in relation to men, not to the law), and be worthy of
|
|
reward, yet in itself, as it is its own end, so also it must be
|
|
regarded as its own reward.
|
|
Virtue considered in its complete perfection is, therefore, regarded
|
|
not as if man possessed virtue, but as if virtue possessed the man,
|
|
since in the former case it would appear as though he had still had
|
|
the choice (for which he would then require another virtue, in order
|
|
to select virtue from all other wares offered to him). To conceive a
|
|
plurality of virtues (as we unavoidably must) is nothing else but to
|
|
conceive various moral objects to which the (rational) will is led
|
|
by the single principle of virtue; and it is the same with the
|
|
opposite vices. The expression which personifies both is a contrivance
|
|
for affecting the sensibility, pointing, however, to a moral sense.
|
|
Hence it follows that an aesthetic of morals is not a part, but a
|
|
subjective exposition of the Metaphysic of Morals; in which the
|
|
emotions that accompany the force of the moral law make the that force
|
|
to be felt; for example: disgust, horror, etc., which gives a sensible
|
|
moral aversion in order to gain the precedence from the merely
|
|
sensible incitement.
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
XV. Of the Principle on which Ethics is separated from
|
|
Jurisprudence
|
|
-
|
|
This separation on which the subdivision of moral philosophy in
|
|
general rests, is founded on this: that the notion of freedom, which
|
|
is common to both, makes it necessary to divide duties into those of
|
|
external and those of internal freedom; the latter of which alone
|
|
are ethical. Hence this internal freedom which is the condition of all
|
|
ethical duty must be discussed as a preliminary (discursus
|
|
praeliminaris), just as above the doctrine of conscience was discussed
|
|
as the condition of all duty.
|
|
-
|
|
REMARKS
|
|
-
|
|
Of the Doctrine of Virtue on the Principle Of Internal Freedom.
|
|
-
|
|
Habit (habitus) is a facility of action and a subjective
|
|
perfection of the elective will. But not every such facility is a free
|
|
habit (habitus libertatis); for if it is custom (assuetudo), that
|
|
is, a uniformity of action which, by frequent repetition, has become a
|
|
necessity, then it is not a habit proceeding from freedom, and
|
|
therefore not a moral habit. Virtue therefore cannot be defined as a
|
|
habit of free law-abiding actions, unless indeed we add "determining
|
|
itself in its action by the idea of the law"; and then this habit is
|
|
not a property of the elective will, but of the rational will, which
|
|
is a faculty that in adopting a rule also declares it to be a
|
|
universal law, and it is only such a habit that can be reckoned as
|
|
virtue. Two things are required for internal freedom: to be master
|
|
of oneself in a given case (animus sui compos) and to have command
|
|
over oneself (imperium in semetipsum), that is to subdue his
|
|
emotions and to govern his passions. With these conditions, the
|
|
character (indoles) is noble (erecta); in the opposite case, it is
|
|
ignoble (indoles abjecta serva).
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
XVI. Virtue requires, first of all, Command over Oneself
|
|
-
|
|
Emotions and passions are essentially distinct; the former belong to
|
|
feeling in so far as this coming before reflection makes it more
|
|
difficult or even impossible. Hence emotion is called hasty (animus
|
|
praeceps). And reason declares through the notion of virtue that a man
|
|
should collect himself; but this weakness in the life of one's
|
|
understanding, joined with the strength of a mental excitement, is
|
|
only a lack of virtue (Untugend), and as it were a weak and childish
|
|
thing, which may very well consist with the best will, and has further
|
|
this one good thing in it, that this storm soon subsides. A propensity
|
|
to emotion (e.g., resentment) is therefore not so closely related to
|
|
vice as passion is. Passion, on the other hand, is the sensible
|
|
appetite grown into a permanent inclination (e. g., hatred in contrast
|
|
to resentment). The calmness with which one indulges it leaves room
|
|
for reflection and allows the mind to frame principles thereon for
|
|
itself; and thus when the inclination falls upon what contradicts
|
|
the law, to brood on it, to allow it to root itself deeply, and
|
|
thereby to take up evil (as of set purpose) into one's maxim; and this
|
|
is then specifically evil, that is, it is a true vice.
|
|
Virtue, therefore, in so far as it is based on internal freedom,
|
|
contains a positive command for man, namely, that he should bring
|
|
all his powers and inclinations under his rule (that of reason); and
|
|
this is a positive precept of command over himself which is additional
|
|
to the prohibition, namely, that he should not allow himself to be
|
|
governed by his feelings and inclinations (the duty of apathy); since,
|
|
unless reason takes the reins of government into its own hands, the
|
|
feelings and inclinations play the master over the man.
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-
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-
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XVII. Virtue necessarily presupposes Apathy (considered as
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Strength)
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-
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This word (apathy) has come into bad repute, just as if it meant
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want of feeling, and therefore subjective indifference with respect to
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the objects of the elective will; it is supposed to be a weakness.
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This misconception may be avoided by giving the name moral apathy to
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that want of emotion which is to be distinguished from indifference.
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In the former, the feelings arising from sensible impressions lose
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their influence on the moral feeling only because the respect for
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the law is more powerful than all of them together. It is only the
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apparent strength of a fever patient that makes even the lively
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sympathy with good rise to an emotion, or rather degenerate into it.
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Such an emotion is called enthusiasm, and it is with reference to this
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that we are to explain the moderation which is usually recommended
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in virtuous practices:
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-
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Insani sapiens nomen ferat, aequus uniqui
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Ultra quam satis est virtutem si petat ipsam.*
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-
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*Horace. ["Let the wise man bear the name of fool, and the just of
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unjust, if he pursue virtue herself beyond the proper bounds."]
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-
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For otherwise it is absurd to imagine that one could be too wise
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or too virtuous. The emotion always belongs to the sensibility, no
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matter by what sort of object it may be excited. The true strength
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|
of virtue is the mind at rest, with a firm, deliberate resolution to
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bring its law into practice. That is the state of health in the
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|
moral life; on the contrary, the emotion, even when it is excited by
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the idea of the good, is a momentary glitter which leaves exhaustion
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|
after it. We may apply the term fantastically virtuous to the man
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who will admit nothing to be indifferent in respect of morality
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|
(adiaphora), and who strews all his steps with duties, as with
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traps, and will not allow it to be indifferent whether a man eats fish
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|
or flesh, drink beer or wine, when both agree with him; a micrology
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|
which, if adopted into the doctrine of virtue, would make its rule a
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tyranny.
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-
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|
REMARK
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-
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|
Virtue is always in progress, and yet always begins from the
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beginning. The former follows from the fact that, objectively
|
|
considered, it is an ideal and unattainable, and yet it is a duty
|
|
constantly to approximate to it. The second is founded subjectively on
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|
the nature of man which is affected by inclinations, under the
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|
influence of which virtue, with its maxims adopted once for all, can
|
|
never settle in a position of rest; but, if it is not rising,
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|
inevitably falls; because moral maxims cannot, like technical, be
|
|
based on custom (for this belongs to the physical character of the
|
|
determination of will); but even if the practice of them become a
|
|
custom, the agent would thereby lose the freedom in the choice of
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|
his maxims, which freedom is the character of an action done from
|
|
duty.
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|
ON_CONSCIENCE
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|
ON CONSCIENCE
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|
-
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|
The consciousness of an internal tribunal in man (before which
|
|
"his thoughts accuse or excuse one another") is CONSCIENCE.
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|
Every man has a conscience, and finds himself observed by an
|
|
inward judge which threatens and keeps him in awe (reverence
|
|
combined with fear); and this power which watches over the laws within
|
|
him is not something which he himself (arbitrarily) makes, but it is
|
|
incorporated in his being. It follows him like his shadow, when he
|
|
thinks to escape. He may indeed stupefy himself with pleasures and
|
|
distractions, but cannot avoid now and then coming to himself or
|
|
awaking, and then he at once perceives its awful voice. In his
|
|
utmost depravity, he may, indeed, pay no attention to it, but he
|
|
cannot avoid hearing it.
|
|
Now this original intellectual and (as a conception of duty) moral
|
|
capacity, called conscience, has this peculiarity in it, that although
|
|
its business is a business of man with himself, yet he finds himself
|
|
compelled by his reason to transact it as if at the command of another
|
|
person. For the transaction here is the conduct of a trial (causa)
|
|
before a tribunal. But that he who is accused by his conscience should
|
|
be conceived as one and the same person with the judge is an absurd
|
|
conception of a judicial court; for then the complainant would
|
|
always lose his case. Therefore, in all duties the conscience of the
|
|
man must regard another than himself as the judge of his actions, if
|
|
it is to avoid self-contradiction. Now this other may be an actual
|
|
or a merely ideal person which reason frames to itself. Such an
|
|
idealized person (the authorized judge of conscience) must be one
|
|
who knows the heart; for the tribunal is set up in the inward part
|
|
of man; at the same time he must also be all-obliging, that is, must
|
|
be or be conceived as a person in respect of whom all duties are to be
|
|
regarded as his commands; since conscience is the inward judge of
|
|
all free actions. Now, since such a moral being must at the same
|
|
time possess all power (in heaven and earth), since otherwise he could
|
|
not give his commands their proper effect (which the office of judge
|
|
necessarily requires), and since such a moral being possessing power
|
|
over all is called GOD, hence conscience must be conceived as the
|
|
subjective principle of a responsibility for one's deeds before God;
|
|
nay, this latter concept is contained (though it be only obscurely) in
|
|
every moral self-consciousness.
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-
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-
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-THE END-
|