About This Book
The work seeks a metaphysical foundation for morality by deriving duties from pure practical reason rather than from experience or inclination. It claims that a good will is the only unconditional good and that moral worth depends on acting from duty, not from desire. The argument advances the categorical imperative as the supreme principle, requiring that one’s maxims be capable of universal law and that rational beings be treated as ends in themselves. It contrasts autonomy of the will, which grounds genuine obligation, with heteronomy, and treats freedom as a necessary presupposition while outlining the limits and implications of practical reason for moral agency.
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