Banno who has made clear he doesn't like. definitions and thinks they derail discussion. — tim wood
freedom is confined to just raw capacity — tim wood
That's the point! You're referring to something not the topic of this thread. You can have your own thread on your topic; this thread is about Kant's usage and understanding. For the fifth and last time, first line of the OP:is that fathoming how a word is used is — Banno
Do you understand that?Following Kant — tim wood
Are you quite sure you want to commit to freedom being able to do whatever we want?You speak as if freedom has a meaning other than being able to do whatever we want. Pray tell, what is this other meaning? — TheMadFool
"Murder" would never be moral. As to killing, it's conceivable that she should be killed, but not that I should do it. The reason being that marriage is a peculiar, unique contract — tim wood
What does HR do? He puts me at disproportionate risk of damage, harm, injury, death. — tim wood
That is, if you're going to argue that moral freedom includes the ability to determine the moral action on the basis of what you like or don't like, then we're irreconcilable — tim wood
The reason being that in liking or wanting, to that extent we're not free, but rather subject-to. A matter of having a liberty. Agreed, the word "freedom" is commonly used here, and well-understood, but it cannot stand because it's a contrary to the freedom Kant has in mind. — tim wood
Well, let's see. Are you buffaloed by the proposition that murder is always immoral? I've assumed here you know what murder is, do you? Or do you believe that a husband could conceivably be in a position where he was morally obliged to choose to kill his wife? What circumstance would that be? Keep in mind I acknowledged the conceivability of having to kill her, but not under circumstances that admit of any moral choice. If you do not understand this, you do not know what marriage is, or understand the nature of contracts - from which I suppose you're not married."Murder" would never be moral. As to killing, it's conceivable that she should be killed, but not that I should do it. The reason being that marriage is a peculiar, unique contract
— tim wood
It's things like this that I don't know how to respond to, — Isaac
Did you not comprehend the mention of proportion? Did you not read where I wrote this:Right. As does the helmeted rider via other means. — Isaac
Do you understand the cost of brain injury, and who pays that cost?Life ends in death, and risk a part of life. Being unavoidable, the right and wrong of actions including risk-taking become a matter of proportion. The helmetless rider in traffic harms no one, until... — tim wood
I get this. What does it have to do with any Kantian concept of freedom and duty? I assume you're not arguing this NF in itself as having any moral significance, are you?I'm saying that "Y will lead to X and you'd like X" is an example of a conclusion with normative force. — Isaac
Although freedoms A and B are different, Freedom B is the ground for freedom A. And the reason is just reason itself. Maybe this: why would you ever do anything you do not want to do (assuming you do not have to do it)?You need to provide a reason why we should aspire to Freedom B — Isaac
Scratch the surface even a little bit and I'm sure most such people would say they risk their lives for freedom B. After all, your A is the freedom to drive on both sides of the road whenever you want. People who have "risked their lives," will tell you clearly that's not what they risked their lives for. And I suspect that most soldiers are Kantians at heart, even if they may not be familiar with the language. Your freedom A is simply a puerile freedom, shorn of reason and responsibility.People risk their lives for Freedom A, — Isaac
Start by distinguishing common, or current, or informal or casual, or even plain wrong, from correct.Tangentially related perhaps, but how so? How do you judge the 'correct' usage? — Isaac
You have not adduced even one single word that addresses any aspect of Kant's thinking. You claim he's wrong, and decline further relevant comment. It's not credible (to me) you're innocent of contact with Kant.Your insistence that we would understand were we only to read more Kant reads like an invitation to a cult - arcane knowledge is to be had, come join us! — Banno
Maybe a philologist. I rather myself think that the "task" of philosophy in this area is concerned with what words mean.is that fathoming how a word is used is often the task of philosophy; — Banno
I think that when one reaches for that, one finds not ground but bootstrap — tim wood
What do you mean by "raw capacity". You speak as if freedom has a meaning other than being able to do whatever we want. Pray tell, what is this other meaning? — TheMadFool
Nor do I find in this any ground whatsoever that relativism might survive in. — tim wood
I am not sure Kant would say that there even are situations where you cannot do your duty. If you cannot do something, it cannot really be considered your duty. What makes your actions free is then choosing your duty. — Echarmion
But the purpose here is to draw attention to people who claim as a matter of right under freedom to do what they want...
If I recall correctly, Kant mostly limits his coercion to those who hinder freedom, so I’m not sure he would advocate penalizing those “who claim as a matter of right under freedom to do what they want”.
I think it’s laudable to say one has a duty to be safe and avoid the risk of harm, and one is free to do so, but once this principle is forced upon others or they are penalized for risk, I think we have the realm of freedom into its opposite. — NOS4A2
Following Kant (and subject to correction on the details), the argument here is that freedom is exactly freedom to do one's duty, and nothing else. * * * Duty, for the moment, is just what reason tells us ought to done.... But the purpose here is to draw attention to people who claim as a matter of right under freedom to do what they want... And I think the logic of the thing compels agreement. Yes? — tim wood
.It is said it is a duty to preserve one’s life, not as a duty, like a firefighter or a soldier, but because, in order for duty to be served, one must be alive.
“....On the other hand, it is a duty to maintain one's life; and, in addition, everyone has also a direct inclination to do so. But on this account the anxious care which most men take for it has no intrinsic worth, and their maxim has no moral import. They preserve their life as duty requires, no doubt, but not because duty requires....” — mww
Laugh, believing we are free to do anything we want seems to lack awareness of consequences. Because there are consequences resulting from what we do, we are not exactly free. Sooner or later the wrongs will come back to bite us — Athena
Duty, for the moment, is just what reason tells us ought to done — tim wood
Duty itself informed by good will. — tim wood
And there is a rationalized justification for an act that most would consider genocidal. Lovely frame work. Thanks Kant. — Book273
I suggest we are always lost and never not lost, anything else mere illusion propped up by a seeming regularity: we think we know, and for a while win some of out bets, but our knowledge spurious. Our duty then to be informed and self-informed as best we can be, reason being our best and only true navigational aid. And it seems to me Kant finds morality in reason, at least as much as with reason. And this is precisely what the mariner does, not just in storm but always. He reads his moment, the vibration of the wind in his lines, the colour of the sky, and what experience tells him. His decision then at that moment being always and forever correct, notwithstanding what comes over the horizon at him.if we are lost and our character is on the line, what is our duty? — Antony Nickles
And here you've got it, imo. Except I quibble on the word "epistemology." If you mean methods by which we know, I agree, But not as itself a claim to knowledge. πιστός, perhaps surprisingly, having nothing to do with knowledge.Krishna advises "knowing the field",... I submit that our duty is found in this space and the context and the ways our character/"humanity" is judged, not as right or wrong or good and bad, but nevertheless as rational (reasonable), rigorous, careful, detailed--as if our approach to a moral moment required an ethical epistemology. — Antony Nickles
A very important discussion currently, so thank you for the post. What sparked my curiosity was the idea of duty and whether there is any compulsion. First, there is the distinction between the rational and emotional, or (Hume's) moral sense/innate moral judgment. I would argue that we can bypass this and still have a personal moral decision bound to reasonable action. — Antony Nickles
Are you quite sure you want to commit to freedom being able to do whatever we want? — tim wood
Google definition of "freedom": the power or right to act, speak, or think as one wants. Freedom is precisely how it's been defined but the actual situation on the ground may vary. Read the fine print :joke: — TheMadFool
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