
Can we regard ourselves as having free will? What is the place of values in a world of facts? What grounds the authority of moral injunctions, and why should we care about them? Unless we provide satisfactory answers to these questions, ethics has no credible status and is likely to be subsumed by psychology, history, or rational decision theory. According to Ermanno Bencivenga, this outcome is both common and regrettable. Bencivenga points to Immanuel Kant for the solution. Kant's philosophy is a sustained, bold, and successful effort aiming at offering us the answers we need. Ethics Vindicated is a clear and thorough account of this effort that builds on Bencivenga's previous interpretation of transcendental philosophy (as articulated in his Kant's Copernican Revolution) and draws on the entire Kantian corpus.
This book investigates whether moral discourse can maintain a credible status independent of psychology, history, or rational decision theory by examining the transcendental foundations of Kantian ethics. Ermanno Bencivenga, a scholar of transcendental philosophy, utilizes the entirety of the Kantian corpus to argue that Kant provides a successful framework for grounding moral authority and free will. The author builds upon his previous work to present a systematic defense of Kant's effort to reconcile values with a world of facts.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students of Kantian philosophy recognize this work as a dense and focused contribution to transcendental ethics. Experts highlight the text as a specialized resource for those already familiar with Bencivenga's previous interpretations of Kant's Copernican revolution.
Page Count:
207
Publication Date:
2006-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190294566
ISBN-13:
9780190294564
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