"Nietzsche versus kant on morality" Essays and Research Papers

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    Kants Universal Law

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    Kants Universal Law Kant’s universal law states‚ “Act only in accordance with that maxim through which you can at the same time will that it become a universal law”. (Kant pg.37) So in the first instance this appears to me a rule I pretty much live by‚ and which have often been taught to myself and others as young children in a simpler form of “Treat others how you would like to be treated.” Kant describes his universal law in several examples and one caught my attention

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    Mill and Nietzsche have different ideas on how people act towards their actions. Mill focuses on the end purpose of human behaviors to create happiness for a group of people rather than an individual happiness. He defines Utilitarianism as human’s actions that lead to happiness. Human’s desires either give pleasure or prevent pain to create happiness (Arthur & Scalet‚ 2009‚ p. 66). For Mill‚ the consequences of an action matter. As discussed in class‚ we could measure the quantity and quality of

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    Duty Ethics Kant

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    Kant and Duty Ethics In this paper I will first go into a detailed review of Kant’s second formulation of the first categorical imperative. I will explain in depth what the second formulation means and how Kant came to take on a philosophical position such as this. Next‚ I will describe the two most pertinent and grounded critiques that Feldman has regarding the second formulation. Then I will defend Kant’s formulation from these critiques. Finally I will summarize the above information and conclude

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    Hegel Vs Kant

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    by an interaction of opposites can we desire to progress and achieve understanding‚ for both the Geist and Zeitgeist‚ and the view of the being as being more dynamic to give more diversity on the concepts we use to understand the world we live in. Kant‚ on the other hand‚ formulated an Idealism that would contain concepts that helped remake a new concept for Hegel to use‚ he formulated the Transcendental Idealism. He focuses on how things would appear to us and how that becomes our experience; a

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    Kant Third Antinomy

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    interpretation and relevance are still pertinent today: the relationship between the second analogy and the third antinomy‚ the exact relationship with transcendental Idealism and the coherence and completeness of the arguments. Among contemporary Kant scholars‚ Henry Allison and Eric Watkins both have radically different interpretations on the success and importance of the third antinomy. This essay will argue that both of these interpretations of the third antinomy run into several fatal problems

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    After Hume passed away there were attempts from various other philosophers to realize his theory. Immanuel Kant held that there were certain instances we could have synthetic a priory rather than strictly posteriori. Andreicut offers a nice metaphor that for Kant‚ we perceive the world as if we’re wearing blue-tinted glasses‚ and so perceive the world to be bluish. In Andreicut metaphor for Kant perspective the blue-tinted glasses present one of the categories in our mind that allow us to interpret

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    state‚ but always striving for something more. Humans strive toward becoming subjective. For Kierkegaard‚ life is a transformation from essential to existential. Nietzsche sees man similar to this‚ He calls man a “bridge" rather than an “end". The important part of a man is his potential. Man is striving‚ but for something different. Nietzsche says that for man Ubermensch‚ the ideal man or Superman‚ is the goal. It’s a representation of man at a constant battle to overcome itself. The Superman must

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    ethics is a deontological‚ absolute theory proposed by Immanuel Kant in the late 1700’s. Kant taught that an action could only count as the action of a good will if it satisfied the test of the Categorical Imperative. The categorical imperative is based around the idea to act solely for the sake of duty. For example‚ you should share your sweets because it is a good thing to do; not because it makes you feel good. Consequentially‚ Kant would justify the good feeling you do when you perform a good act

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    Immanel Kant Analysis

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    When I first read the essay by Immanel Kant‚ "What is Enlightenment?" I thought that Enlightenment meant becoming aware of things you were otherwise in the dark about. But‚ after reading Kant’s article a few times‚ I saw that he views enlightenment as "Man’s emergence from his self-imposed immaturity”. Kant discusses the nature of Enlightenment and how it can be taken to the overall public‚ he also says in his essay that “Enlightenment is man’s release from his self-incurred tutelage.” The

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    On the Genealogy of Morality the word ‘ressentiment’ is possibly one of the key concepts in Nietzsche’s ideas about the psychology of ‘slave-morality’‚ the birth of morality‚ and the way it reassigned morality as we know it today. The word meaning itself is very close to the word resentment in English but is slightly different. The context in which Nietzsche uses the word ‘ressentiment’ is a psychological state of people that are conscious of their own inferiority and turn it to hatred towards external

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