Skip to content
Carmelics
TopicsThinkersChangesContributorsLoading account…

    Carmelics

    A reasoning platform. Break down any belief into clear reasons, explore both sides, and weigh the evidence honestly.

    Navigate

    • Topics
    • Search
    • Recent Changes
    • Contribute
    • How It Works
    • Glossary
    • Thinkers
    • Contributors
    • About
    • Statistics
    • Terms
    • Privacy

    Database

    Statements
    —
    Perspectives
    —
    Topics
    —

    Press ? for keyboard shortcuts

    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
    Made withinDC&Austin
    Statements
    321,452
    Perspectives
    108,905
    Topics
    42
    Therefore the moral law must be universal. — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
    HistoryEditSee Inverse

    Part of a larger discussion

    Supports→We must act only on those maxims that we can consistently will as a universal law.

    Therefore the moral law must be universal.

    Moral Responsibility
    ?Rate how convincing each reason is below to see the overall strength.

    No one has weighed in yet. Be the first to share reasons for or against this statement.

    Sign in or register to share your perspective on this statement.

    Topics

    Moral Responsibility

    Connections

    2 topics

    Free Will & Foreknowledge2 linkedRights & Liberty2 linked

    Next step

    Based on where you are in your exploration

    Browse more in Moral Responsibility
    Related propositions within the same area of thought.

    Related

    Freedom requires that we utilize a law to guide our decisions that can come to u...Practical reason presupposes that we understand ourselves as free.The moral law must have no content provided by sense, desire, or any other conti...This self-imposition of the moral law is autonomy.
    +1 moreShow less
    We must act only on those maxims that we can consistently will as a universal la...

    Similar

    If a moral truth is necessary, then that moral truth must be universal84%The self-imposition of universal moral law is the ground of moral obli...83%The self-imposition of universal moral law is the ground of the respec...82%The capacity to impose the moral law upon oneself is the ultimate sour...79%

    Source

    AI-extracted
    SEP: autonomy-moral
    View source passageHide passage
    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

    Details

    Type
    premise
    Perspectives
    0 (0 for, 0 against)
    Edits
    1 edit

    Open for perspectives

    This idea is waiting for its first supporting or challenging perspective.

    Share the first perspective