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    Kant's transcendental idealism establishes that determini... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→A human being is not endowed with freedom in the ordinary sense of the term.

    Kant's transcendental idealism establishes that deterministic causation applies only to phenomena, leaving the noumenal self as the proper locus of autonomous rational agency.

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    1 reason for
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    Reasons For

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    • 1.Kant distinguishes phenomena (appearances) from noumena (things-in-themselves), allowing causation to govern only our experience without constraining transcendental freedom.
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    • 2.Moral responsibility requires agents capable of acting from rational principles independent of natural laws; the noumenal self provides this necessary foundation.
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    • 3.The phenomenal/noumenal divide preserves both scientific determinism and human autonomy by placing them in non-competing domains of reality.
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    Reasons Against

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    • 1.If the noumenal self is entirely unknowable and causally inert in the phenomenal world, it cannot meaningfully ground our empirically observable choices and actions.
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    • 2.Kant's two-standpoints solution creates a puzzle: the same person cannot coherently be both fully determined (as phenomenon) and fully free (as noumenon).
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    Free Will & Foreknowledge1 linkedMoral Responsibility1 linked

    Related

    A human being is not endowed with freedom in the ordinary sense of the term.If the noumenal self is entirely unknowable and causally inert in the phenomenal...Kant distinguishes phenomena (appearances) from noumena (things-in-themselves), ...Kant's two-standpoints solution creates a puzzle: the same person cannot coheren...
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    Moral responsibility requires agents capable of acting from rational principles ...The phenomenal/noumenal divide preserves both scientific determinism and human a...

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    2 (1 for, 1 against)
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