Kantian Commitments Essays on Moral Theory and Practice

Kantian Commitments: Essays on Moral Theory and Practice by Barbara Herman, published by Oxford University Press in 2022, comprises ten essays that explore the fundamentals of Kant’s ethics. This edition, written in English and spanning 222 pages, presents a series of efforts to rethink key aspects of Kant’s moral framework, including the categorical imperative and the nature of moral duties. The essays aim to clarify the connections between rationality and moral obligations, offering new insights into Kantian theory.
Readers will find that the essays are divided into two parts, with the first revisiting central elements of Kant’s ethics and the second addressing less central yet significant topics. These include Kant’s moralized view of history, the implications of his moral philosophy for social pluralism, and the relationship between his moral psychology and contemporary theories of human development. The overall objective is to engage in a thorough inquiry that removes assumptions often associated with Kant’s texts, thereby illuminating the depth and ambition of his ethical commitments.
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Kantian Commitments comprises ten essays that represent a series of efforts to rethink many of the fundamentals of Kant’s ethics and to draw out some implications for moral theory and practice. The essays of Part One revisit and revise central pieces of Kant’s moral framework, offering a new understanding of the formulas of the categorical imperative, revisiting the idea of exceptions to duties, and sharpening the contrast between the value commitments of Kantian theory and other deontologies (especially recent contractualisms). The working hypothesis is to take seriously the idea that the formulas of the categorical imperative frame an account of moral reasoning with standards of validity and soundness that enable moral judgment to explicate the connection between our rational natures and our duties.
Part Two takes on some less central but important topics which are informed by the arguments of Part One: the rationale for Kant’s moralized view of history; the implications of a Kantian view of morality for social pluralism; the fit of Kant’s conception of moral psychology with affect-centered theories of human development; the motivation behind Kant’s argument for indirect duties to animals; and the place of the idea of the highest good in a morally good life. The overall aim of the essays is to explore core Kantian commitments through a program of inquiry that peels away assumptions often brought to Kant’s texts that introduce questions their arguments were not meant to answer. Removing these obstacles clarifies the ambition and scale of Kantian theory.
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