Barbara Herman argues for a radical shift in the way we perceive
Kant's ethics. She convincingly reinterprets the key texts, at once
allowing Kant to mean what he says while showing that what Kant
says makes good moral sense. She urges us to abandon the tradition
that describes Kantian ethics as a deontology, a moral system of
rules of duty. She finds the central idea of Kantian ethics not in
duty but in practical rationality as a norm of unconditioned
goodness. This book both clarifies Kant's own theory and adds
programmatic vitality to modern moral philosophy.
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