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    Carmelics

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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
    Made withinDC&Austin
    Statements
    321,452
    Perspectives
    108,905
    Topics
    42
    Home/Original/inverse
    See Original
    Inverse View

    It is not the case that Kant argues that true virtues derive their moral worth from the rational will, making their goodness unconditional rather than circumstantially variable.

    ?Set your confidence on the premises below to see your aggregate.

    Reasons For

    1 perspective
    Reason for
    ?
    • 1.Virtue requires practical wisdom to judge which action respects rational will in context; context cannot be eliminated from morality.
      ?

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    • 2.Consequences matter for moral evaluation; identical intentions producing suffering versus flourishing seem morally different.
      ?

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    • 3.Rational will itself is shaped by social conditions and emotions; claiming it's unconditional obscures these real dependencies.
      ?

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    Reasons Against

    1 perspective
    Reason against
    ?
    • 1.Moral worth requires a source independent of outcomes; only rational will provides this stable, non-contingent foundation.
      ?

      Think about whether this reason is strong or weak

    • 2.If virtue's goodness depended on circumstances, the same act could be virtuous and vicious simultaneously, making morality incoherent.
      ?

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    • 3.Duty grounded in rational universalizability transcends particular contexts, explaining why moral principles feel categorical.
      ?

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