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    On this interpretation, the will is identified with pract... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Challenges→It is unclear whether this guise-of-the-good interpretation of Kant sufficiently allows for the possibility that one can knowingly and willingly do wrong.

    On this interpretation, the will is identified with practical reason.

    Free Will & ForeknowledgeMoral Responsibility
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    Moral ResponsibilityFree Will & Foreknowledge

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    If willing is constrained by the moral law, it is difficult to account for knowi...It is unclear whether this guise-of-the-good interpretation of Kant sufficiently...Practical reason is, in part, the moral law.

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    A different interpretive strategy, which has gained prominence in recent years, focuses on Kant’s apparent identification, in Groundwork III, of the will and practical reason. One natural way of interpreting Kant’s conception of freedom is to understand it in terms of the freedom and spontaneity of reason itself. This in turn apparently implies that our wills are necessarily aimed at what is rational and reasonable. To will something, on this picture, is to govern oneself in accordance with reas

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