486 Notes to Pages 282-287
- Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 51.
- Kant, "Old Saw," p. 53. That the concept of duty must be understood in this way
by everyone is a central claim of the Foundations as well. - Hamann, Briefwechsel, V, p. 147.
- Hamann, Briefu>echsel,Y, pp. 176,182; see also p. 189, where Hamann predicts that
it will soon be sent off. - Kant, Practical Philosophy, pp. 43-108 (Ak 4, pp. 387-463). In the following sum¬
mary I shall concentrate on the metaphysical aspects of the work, and not on the
practical implications or applications of the categorical imperative. For a percep¬
tive account of the latter, see especially Barbara Herman, The Practice of Moral
Judgment (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1993). For a collection of
some of the most important recent essays on this work, see Paul Guyer (ed.),
Kant's Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals: Critical Essays (Lanham, Md:
Rowman & Littlefield, 1998). - Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 44(Ak4, p. 389).
- Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 47 (Ak 4, p. 392).
- See pp. 144-151, this volume.
- Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 52 (Ak 4, p. 397).
- Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 57 (Ak 4, p. 402).
- Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 61 (Ak 4, p. 406).
- Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 65 (Ak4, p. 412). .. '•
- Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 46 (Ak 4, p. 390).
- Ibid.
- This cannot be overemphasized, given the contemporary tendency (one that is
almost universal) to treat Kant's Foundations as being about the everyday situations
of ordinary moral agents. - Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 72 (Ak 4, p. 420).
- Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 108 (Ak 4, p. 463).
- Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 73 (Ak 4, p. 421). He also formulates it as follows:
"act as if the maxim of your action were to become a universal law of nature."
Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 73 (Ak 4, p. 421). - Kant, Practical Philosophy, pp. 80, 83 (Ak 4, pp. 429, 433). Since Kant does not
clearly identify the third version, there may be some dispute about this. - Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 87 (Ak 4, p. 438).
- Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 89 (Ak 4, p. 440).
- Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 94 (Ak 4, p. 446).
- Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 96 (Ak 4, p. 448).
- Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 96 (Ak 4, p. 449).
- Kant, Practical Philosophy, pp. 9Öf. (Ak 4, p. 449). This description of the circle is
somewhat different from Kant's own, but I do not think it is incompatible with what
he says. The entire problem is difficult, and this short summary should not be
taken as an attempt to solve it. For a good discussion of the problem see Henry E.
Allison, "The Reciprocity Thesis," in Kant's Theory of Freedom, pp. 201-230. - Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 98 (Ak 4, p. 451).
- Kant, Practical Philosophy, p. 77 (Ak 3, p. 425).