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    The stronger claim that one rationally wills that all tal... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Challenges→Kant's argument only needs the weaker claim that rationality requires willing the development of some of one's talents

    The stronger claim that one rationally wills that all talents be developed is dubious and unnecessary

    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics
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    All that is required to show that one cannot will a talentless world is that, in...Kant's argument only needs the weaker claim that rationality requires willing th...

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    Kant's argument that full rationality requires willing the development...89%Kant's argument only needs the weaker claim that rationality requires ...85%All that is required to show that one cannot will a talentless world i...84%If rationality required aiming at developing all of one's talents, the...84%

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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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