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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page overview of Immanuel Kant and his philosophies. This paper provides an emphasis on examining the contention that we must consider people as an ends and not just as a means of our actions. The contrasting views of Nozick and Rawls in regard to the appropriate means by which Kant’s principle should be implemented are examined. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPkantEn.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Philosophers have argued for centuries about such broad topics as right verses wrong. The manner
in which we are philosophically committed to dealing with other people is at the center of these arguments. Immanuel Kant, in particular, has been extremely helpful in illuminating our
commitments and responsibilities to others. Indeed, Immanuel Kant has offered volumes of wisdom in the fields of philosophy and logic. One of Kants moral principles says that we
must consider people as ends and not just as means of our actions. The exact means by which this principle can be implemented, however, is debated as well.
Two of the most notable of the proposals for the implementation of this principle are Rawls and Nozick. Kant approaches ethics from the
standpoint that appropriate behavior is the result of social determination and that some thing such as right and wrong are simply principles which are inherent in human nature. Kant
proposes that there is a categorical imperative in reason, that life is a series of rational choices and these choices are made through a consideration not of personal benefit but
simply on the basis that the choices are the only rational ones. Kant argues that all human beings rationalize their choices in life not because they will benefit from
a particular action but because their own rationality in fact demands a particular action (Spickard, 1998). According to Kant, one of the most
obvious tenants of our own rationality is the commitment to consider people as ends and not just as means of our actions. Kants views are closely associated with his
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