Throughout his writings, Immanuel Kant offers, but does not clearly defend, the claim that evil involves self-deception. Laura Papish's Kant on Evil, Self-Deception, and Moral Reform explains why Kant sees self-deception as implicated in evil and how, by contrast, human beings can develop a self-knowledge that facilitates moral reform.
Throughout his writings, Immanuel Kant offers, but does not clearly defend, the claim that evil involves self-deception. Laura Papish's Kant on Evil, Self-Deception, and Moral Reform explains why Kant sees self-deception as implicated in evil and how, by contrast, human beings can develop a self-knowledge that facilitates moral reform.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Laura Papish is an assistant professor of philosophy at The George Washington University, having received her Ph.D. from Northwestern University in 2011. Her main research areas are Kant's moral theory, the history of ethics, and contemporary ethics. Her articles have appeared in (among others) Kantian Review, Social Theory and Practice, Idealistic Studies, and Ethical Theory and Moral Practice.
Inhaltsangabe
* Introduction * Chapter One: The Self of Self-Love * Chapter Two: Evil and the Subordination of the Moral Law * Chapter Three: Kantian Self-Deception * Chapter Four: Self-Deception, the Necessary Conditions of Evil, and the Entrenchment of Evil * Chapter Five: Self-Deception, Dissimulation, and the Universality of Evil in Human Nature * Chapter Six: Kantian Self-Cognition * Chapter Seven: Kant's Two-Stage Model of Moral Reform * Chapter Eight: Moral Misunderstandings and the Ethical Community * Conclusion * Bibliography
* Introduction * Chapter One: The Self of Self-Love * Chapter Two: Evil and the Subordination of the Moral Law * Chapter Three: Kantian Self-Deception * Chapter Four: Self-Deception, the Necessary Conditions of Evil, and the Entrenchment of Evil * Chapter Five: Self-Deception, Dissimulation, and the Universality of Evil in Human Nature * Chapter Six: Kantian Self-Cognition * Chapter Seven: Kant's Two-Stage Model of Moral Reform * Chapter Eight: Moral Misunderstandings and the Ethical Community * Conclusion * Bibliography
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