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    A law that only identifies means to pre-given ends cannot... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Supports→Practical reason is not purely instrumental

    A law that only identifies means to pre-given ends cannot be self-given by an autonomous rational will

    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics
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    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics

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    An autonomous agent's self-given law must tell the agent which ends to pursue, n...Practical reason is not purely instrumentalPurely instrumental practical reason is limited to discovering means to ends dic...

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    The law an autonomous agent gives herself must specify which ends to p...79%Practically rational beings are autonomous, meaning their wills can be...79%The rule must determine the rational will apart from any end the agent...78%An autonomous agent's self-given law must tell the agent which ends to...78%

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    SEP: moral-epistemology-a-priori
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    How, specifically, does Kant think that one can establish the categorical imperative a priori? The crucial premise is that practically rational beings are autonomous, in the sense that their wills can be determined by rules they give themselves. Kant holds that the law that an autonomous agent gives to herself must tell her which ends to pursue and not merely which means to employ in light of the ends the agent already has. Kant therefore rejects the more orthodox conception of practical reason

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