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    Practical reason presupposes that we understand ourselves... — Carmelics
    Home/Free Will & Foreknowledge
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    Supports→We must act only on those maxims that we can consistently will as a universal law.

    Practical reason presupposes that we understand ourselves as free.

    Free Will & Foreknowledge
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    Free Will & Foreknowledge

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    Moral Responsibility3 linkedRights & Liberty2 linked

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    Freedom requires that we utilize a law to guide our decisions that can come to u...The moral law must have no content provided by sense, desire, or any other conti...Therefore the moral law must be universal.This self-imposition of the moral law is autonomy.
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    We must act only on those maxims that we can consistently will as a universal la...

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    Ameriks holds that freedom is to be settled by determining whether we ...80%Acting under the Idea of freedom does not mean a rational will must be...79%Kant's conception of freedom should be understood in terms of the free...78%Providing a reason for an action is compatible with that action being ...77%

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    SEP: autonomy-moral
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    Autonomy is central in certain moral frameworks, both as a model of the moral person — the feature of the person by virtue of which she is morally obligated — and as the aspect of persons which grounds others’ obligations to her or him. For Kant, the self-imposition of universal moral law is the ground of both moral obligation generally and the respect others owe to us (and we owe ourselves). In short, practical reason — our ability to use reasons to choose our own actions — presupposes that we

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