Benjamin said that the CI makes one duty-bound to disclose the location of a potential victim to a murderer and that is, obviously, wrong. Kant replied that the person must tell the truth, in spite of the horrible consequences. His reasoning is based on not using people. — TheMadFool
Kant specifically says that one is duty-bound to lie to a would-be murderer. — Michael
Kant formulated the Categorical Imperative (CI). The CI basically states that only those actions are morally good that can be universal law. Have I got that right?
And you're still wrong. According to Kant, one's duty doesn't depend on others being dutiful. It is wrong for me to lie even if others lie. It is wrong for me to kill even if others kill. — Michael
that form must pass the test of non-contradiction — Cavacava
The person can always choose to say nothing to the would be murderer, and then everyone is happy. — MikeL
Yes, but if you're compelled to give an answer the problem remains. — TheMadFool
Can you think of something probably more likely than Kant's failure?Perhaps he ''failed'' to see the full power of the categorical imperative. — TheMadFool
Kant argued similarly from a different direction: a perfect being has no need for any CI. You seem like you might enjoy reading some Kant.Applied universally, it precludes any conflict of duty.... The point is there's no reason to lie in a world without murderers....or liars. Such a world is what I refer to as perfect.
Your ensuing reasoning is solid, and acceptable. It reminds one of the prisoners' dilemma, but is more general, and with a more wide-spread applicability.The CI basically states that only those actions are morally good that can be universal law. — TheMadFool
Can you think of something probably more likely than Kant's failure? — tim wood
If so then to lie to an ax murder is neither moral nor immoral because in this circumstance one is not free, so there is no moral choice, in my opinion. — Cavacava
Truthfulness in statements which cannot be avoided is the formal duty of an individual to everyone, however great may be the disadvantage accruing to himself or to another.
...
To be truthful (honest) in all declarations, therefore, is a sacred and absolutely commanding decree of reason, limited by no expediency.
...
Each man has not only a right but even the strict duty to be truthful in statements he cannot avoid making, whether they harm himself or others.
In so doing, he does not do harm to him who suffers as a consequence; accident causes this harm. For one is not at all free to choose in such a case, since truthfulness (if he must speak) is an unconditional duty.
...
The "German philosopher" will not take as one of his principles the proposition (p.124): "To tell the truth is a duty, but only to him who has a right to the truth." He will not do so, first, because of the ambiguous formulation of this proposition, for truth is not a possession the right to which can be granted to one and denied to another. But he will not do so chiefly because the duty of truthfulness (which is the only thing in question here) makes no distinction between persons to whom one has this duty and to whom one can exempt himself from this duty; rather, it is an unconditional duty which holds in all circumstances.
Maybe so, but as I already stated, this is extraneous to his earlier work (1785) the Groundwork for the Metaphysics of Morales , which is the basis of his moral system. — Cavacava
Consequently as practical reason or as the will of a rational being it must regard itself as free, that is to say, the will of such a being cannot be a will of its own except under the idea of freedom. This idea must therefore in a practical point of view be ascribed to every rational being.
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.