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    Rationality seems to require much less than full developm... — Carmelics
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    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Challenges→Kant's argument that full rationality requires willing the development of all one's talents is dubious

    Rationality seems to require much less than full development of all talents, namely a judicious picking and choosing among one's abilities

    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics
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    Given limitations on our time, energy and interest, it is difficult to see how f...Kant's argument that full rationality requires willing the development of all on...

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    Kant's argument that full rationality requires willing the development...81%The stronger claim that one rationally wills that all talents be devel...80%Kant's argument only needs the weaker claim that rationality requires ...80%If rationality required aiming at developing all of one's talents, the...78%

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    By contrast with the maxim of the lying promise, we can easily conceive of adopting a maxim of refusing to develop any of our talents in a world in which that maxim is a universal law of nature. It would undoubtedly be a world more primitive than our own, but pursuing such a policy is still conceivable in it. However, it is not, Kant argues, possible to rationally will this maxim in such a world. The argument for why this is so, however, is not obvious, and some of Kant’s thinking seems hardly c

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