First published in 1990. The aim of this thesis is to show that the
way to understand the central claims of Kant's ethics is to accept
the idea that morality is a distinctive form of rationality; that
the moral "ought" belongs to a system of imperatives based in
practical reason; and that moral judgment, therefore, is a species
of rational assessment of agents' actions. It argues, in effect,
that you cannot understand Kant's views about morality if you read
him with Humean assumptions about rationality. This title will be
of interest to students of philosophy.
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