I want to start a discussion here on these two competing views of moral philosophy, does the action matter more or do the consequences matter more. This varies from scenario to scenario but I think it is still a fun discussion to have. — Grievous
There's a lot of misunderstanding going on here. To judge a principle of necessity would simply be to judge whether it is in fact a principle of necessity. I'm certainly not saying that a Kantian moral judgement judges the categorical imperative. Of course it doesn't. It judges an action according to its compatibility with the moral law (categorical imperative). Lying, for example, is (according to Kant) rationally incompatible with the categorical imperative. The categorical imperative is the criterion for judging the moral value of actions; so judging what one's duty is, is just a question of that - judging what action it is my duty to perform or avoid, in the light of the categorical imperative.One cannot judge a principle of necessity.
To judge a principle of necessity would simply be to judge whether it is in fact a principle of necessity. — Bunji
I disagree. A principle can be posited as a necessary ground (for moral action), and it remains a principle even if that principle is judged not to be a necessary ground (for moral action). The judgement in this case concerns whether the posited principle is any good. It does not defeat the fact that it's a principle.A principle of necessity has already been posited as such..To then judge whether or not it is a ground, defeats the fact it is a principle.
I take you to mean: "iff he can show the condition is possible without it".this is not a necessary principle for this condition, iff he can show the condition is impossible without it.
Actually it's predicated on one fundamental principle - the categorical imperative.Kantian deontology is predicated on fundamental principles
That's just a dogmatic assertion. I take the view that moral principles often lead to bad judgements and at best should be treated as rules of thumb. A morally sensitive agent doesn't need them....as is any decent moral philosophy
Kantian deontology is predicated on fundamental principles....
Actually it's predicated on one fundamental principle - the categorical imperative. — Bunji
I've been talking about judging actions by means of Kantian principles — Bunji
I think Kant's insistence that morality consists in principles is a mistake. — Bunji
I take the view that moral principles often lead to bad judgements and at best should be treated as rules of thumb. A morally sensitive agent doesn't need them. — Bunji
A maxim is I suppose a limited sort of principle, in that it is a determination to always do a particular thing under particular circumstances; but it applies only to oneself. It becomes a proper principle when it's universalized as applying to all rational beings. For Kant there is only one fundamental principle which defines the moral condition and determines the moral value of action, and that is the categorical imperative.Which contains a maxim, which is itself a principle.
It's always possible that I didn't express what I meant clearly enough, but I think you objected to something I didn't actually say. Any chance you could remind me of exactly what it was I said, verbatim, that you objected to?That's not what you said. If you had, I wouldn't have objected.
Sorry but this seems terribly confused.In addition, we don't think in terms of principles, that is pure a priori legislations, when we consider our actions, which indicates it is not necessarily principles that lead us to bad judgements. Rather, we look to the benefit we may or may not receive from the action, which leads back to the fallacious proposition that Kantian deontology respects right/wrong, when in truth it respects only good/moral, not good/immoral.
"If your aim is to get a good job, then you should study hard". This does not express a moral imperative. A moral imperative is necessarily categorical and concerns what it is right to do. — Bunji
What you've given is a hypothetical imperative, which proves all moral imperatives are not categorical,
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.