
Published online:
03 October 2011
Published in print:
01 May 1997
Online ISBN:
9780191683701
Print ISBN:
9780198269571
Contents
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a. Kant’s Ethical Theory a. Kant’s Ethical Theory
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The Formula of Universal Laws The Formula of Universal Laws
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The Formula of the End in Itself The Formula of the End in Itself
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b. A Contemporary Kantian b. A Contemporary Kantian
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The Necessary Conditions for Moral Judgement The Necessary Conditions for Moral Judgement
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The Three-Part Structure of Morality The Three-Part Structure of Morality
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Exaggerating our Capacities and Diminishing the Demand Exaggerating our Capacities and Diminishing the Demand
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Subjective Guilt Subjective Guilt
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Do we Know How God Thinks? Do we Know How God Thinks?
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c. The Christian Seriousness of Kant c. The Christian Seriousness of Kant
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Cite
HARE, JOHN E., 'Kant and the Moral Demand', The Moral Gap: Kantian Ethics, Human Limits, and God's Assistance, Oxford Studies in Theological Ethics (Oxford , 1997; online edn, Oxford Academic, 3 Oct. 2011), https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198269571.003.0002, accessed 12 May 2025.
Abstract
This chapter examines philosopher Immanuel Kant’s thoughts on moral demand. It discusses Kant’s account of what morality demands and explains what he called the categorical imperative, which he believed to the the supreme principle of morality. It analyses Kant’s ethical theory in the context of Kantian theory in contemporary literature and evaluates how this theory may be applied in dealing with the gap between moral demand and limitations of natural human capacity.
Keywords:
moral demand, Immanuel Kant, categorical imperative, morality, ethical theory, natural human capacity
Collection:
Oxford Scholarship Online
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