Literatur zu Kants Ethik - Ethikseite
Literatur zu Kants Ethik - Ethikseite
Literatur zu Kants Ethik - Ethikseite
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Happiness, Cambridge, S. 287–329.<br />
2001 [384] Guyer, Paul (2001): The Form and Matter of the Categorical Imperative, in Kant und die<br />
Berliner Aufklärung. Akten des IX. Internationalen Kant-Kongresses, hrsg. von<br />
Volker Gerhardt, Rolf-Peter Horstmann und Ralph Schumacher, Berlin, Band I, S.<br />
131–50. Wiederabgedruckt in Guyer, Kant’s System of Nature and Freedom. Selected<br />
Essays, Oxford 2005, S. 146–68.<br />
2002 [385] Guyer, Paul (2002): Ends of Reason and Ends of Nature: The Place of Teleology in Kant’s<br />
Ethics, Journal of Value Inquiry 36, S. 161–86. Wiederabgedruckt in Guyer, Kant’s<br />
System of Nature and Freedom. Selected Essays, Oxford 2005, S. 169–97.<br />
2002 [386] Guyer, Paul (2002): Kant’s Deductions of the Principles of Right, in Kant’s Metaphysics of<br />
Morals. Interpretative Essays, hrsg. von Mark Timmons, Oxford, S. 23–64.<br />
Wiederabgedruckt in Guyer, Kant’s System of Nature and Freedom. Selected Essays,<br />
Oxford 2005, S. 198–242.<br />
2003 [387] Guyer, Paul (2003): Kant on the Theory and Practice of Autonomy, Social Philosophy and<br />
Policy 20/2, S. 70–98. Wiederabgedruckt in Guyer, Kant’s System of Nature and<br />
Freedom. Selected Essays, Oxford 2005, S. 115–45.<br />
2005 [388] Guyer, Paul (2005): Kant’s System of Duties, in Guyer, Kant’s System of Nature and Freedom.<br />
Selected Essays, Oxford, S. 243–74.<br />
2007 [389] Guyer, Paul (2007): Kant’s Groundwork for the Metaphysics of Morals: A Reader’s Guide,<br />
London. 49<br />
2007 [390] Guyer, Paul (2007): Naturalistic and Transcendental Moments in Kant’s Moral Philosophy,<br />
Inquiry 50, S. 444–64. 50 – Da<strong>zu</strong>: [10], [966], [1312].<br />
2007 [391] Guyer, Paul (2007): Response to Critics, Inquiry 50, S. 497–510. – Zu [10], [966], [1312].<br />
2009 [392] Guyer, Paul (2009): Ist und Soll. Von Hume bis Kant, und heute, in Kant und die Zukunft der<br />
europäischen Aufklärung, hrsg. von Heiner Klemme, Berlin, S. 210–31.<br />
2009 [393] Guyer, Paul (2009): Problems with Freedom: Kant’s Argument in Groundwork III and its<br />
Subsequent Emendations, in Kant’s Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals. A<br />
Critical Guide, hrsg. von Jens Timmermann, Cambridge, S. 176–202.<br />
49 Inhalt: Sources and Abbreviations (S. vii), 1. Context (S. 1), 2. Overview of Themes (S. 10), 3. Reading the<br />
Text: Preface (S. 23), 4. Reading the Text: Section I. From the Good Will to the Formula of Universal Law<br />
(S. 36), 5. Reading the Text: Section II. Formulating the Categorical Imperative (S. 66), 6. Reading the<br />
Text: Section III. The Categorical Imperative Applies to Us (S. 146), Notes (S. 172), Suggestions for<br />
Further Reading (S. 179), Index (S. 183).<br />
50 “During the 1760s and 1770s, Kant entertained a naturalistic approach to ethics based on the supposed<br />
psychological fact of a human love for freedom. During the critical period, especially in the Groundwork for<br />
the Metaphysics of Morals, Kant clearly rejected such an approach. But his attempt at a metaphysical<br />
foundation for ethics in section III of the Groundwork was equally clearly a failure. Kant recognized this in<br />
his appeal to the “fact of reason” argument in the Critique of Practical Reason, but thereby gave up on any<br />
attempt to ground the fundamental principle of morality at all. So it is of interest to see how far we might<br />
now proceed along the lines of his original naturalistic approach.”