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Glyn Hughes' Squashed Philosophers
The Condensed Edition of
Immanuel Kant's
Critiques of Pure & Practical Reason
... in 5,700 words
"Reason is the pupil of itself alone. It
is the oldest of the sciences"
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INTRODUCTION
Kant claimed that he was 'awakened from his dogmatic
slumbers' by Hume's criticism of the concept of cause
and effect. However, as Bertrand Russell points out, the
awakening was only temporary, and he soon invented a
soporific which enabled him to sleep again.
In Kant's view Pure Reason teaches that human knowledge
is based on experience; but Practical Reason recognizes
that there are a priori in the mind certain notions
independent of experience and postulating the ideas of
human liberty, God and immortality. So, while
distinguishing the provinces of materialism and
idealism, he attempted to find a bond of union between
them.
Published in 1788, the Critique of Practical Reason
forms the central focus of Kant's thinking. It stands
midway between the Critique of Pure Reason and the
Critique of Judgement. Here Kant figures as a vindicator
of the truth of Christianity, approaching his proof by
first establishing positive affirmations of the
immortality of the soul and the existence of God. It
includes an argument concerning the summum bonum
of life, the special aim being to demonstrate that man
should not simply seek to be happy, but should, by
absolute obedience to the moral law, seek to become
worthy of that happiness which God can bestow.
ABOUT
THIS SQUASHED VERSION
The previous translators and editors of Kant's
Pure Reason have been universally scathing of the
style of this strong contender for the title of 'worst
written book ever'. 'Wearisome' 'repetetive' 'clumsy'
are among the kinder descriptions. JMD Mieklejohn
explains how "He wearies by frequent repetition, and
employs a great number of words to express, in the
clumsiest way, what could have been enounced more
clearly and distinctly with a few". It is that clear
enouncement with a few words that is aimed for in this
condensed version, largely based on the abridgement
first published by Sir John Hammeron at the beginning of
the twentieth century. It may well have succeeded, but,
to be honest, Kant being Kant, it is rather difficult to
tell.
The
Critique of Pure Reason
by Immanuel Kant,
1781
This edition edited by
Glyn
Hughes
© 2002
I--KNOWLEDGE TRANSCENDENTAL: AESTHETIC
EXPERIENCE is something of which we are conscious. It is
the first result of our comprehension, but it is not the
limit of our understanding, since it stimulates our
faculty of reason, but does not satisfy its desire for
knowledge.
While all our knowledge may begin with sensible
impressions or experience there is an element in it
which does not rise from this source, but transcends it.
That knowledge is transcendental which is occupied not
so much with mere outward objects as with our manner of
knowing those objects, that is to say, with a priori
concepts of them.
All our knowledge is either a priori or a
posteriori. That is a posteriori knowledge
which is derived from sensible experience as including
sensible impressions or states; while a priori
knowledge is that which is not thus gained, but consists
of whatever is universal or necessary.
A complete Transcendental Philosophy would be a
systematic exposition of all that is a priori in
human knowledge, or of 'all the principles of pure
reason.' But a Critique of Pure Reason cannot include
all this. It can do little more than deal with the
synthetic element or quality in a priori
knowledge, as distinguished from the analytic elements.
We perceive objects through our sensibility which
furnishes us, as our faculty of receptivity, with those
intuitions that become translated into thought by means
of the understanding. This is the origin of our
conceptions, or ideas. I denominate as matter that which
in a phenomenon corresponds to sensation; while I call
form that quality of matter which presents it in a
perceived order. Only matter is presented to our minds
a posteriori; as to form, this must inevitably
exist in the mind a priori, and therefore it can
be considered apart from all sensation.
Pure representation, entirely apart from sensation, in a
transcendental signification, forms the pure intuition
of the mind, existing in it as a mere form of
sensibility. 'Transcendental aesthetic' is the science
of all the principles of sensibility. But transcendental
logic is the science of the principles of pure thought.
In studying the former we shall find that there are two
pure forms of sensuous intuition, namely, space and
time.
Are space and time actual entities? Or are they only
relations of things? Space is simply the form of all the
phenomena of external senses; that is, it is the
subjective condition of the sensibility under which
alone external intuition is possible. Thus the form of
all phenomena may exist a priori in the soul as a
pure intuition previous to all experience. So we can
only speak of space and of extended objects from the
standpoint of human reason. But when we have abstracted
all the forms perceived by our sensibility, there
remains a pure intuition which we call space. Therefore
our discussion teaches us the objective validity of
space with regard to all that can appear before us
externally as an object; but equally the subjective
ideality of space with regard to things if they are
considered in themselves by our reason, that is, without
taking into account the nature of our sensibility.
Time is not empirically conceived of; that is, it is not
experimentally apprehended. Time is a necessary
representation on which all intuitions are dependent,
and the representation of time to the mind is thus given
a priori. In it alone can phenomena be
apprehended. These may vanish, but time cannot be put
aside.
Time is not something existing by itself independently,
but is the formal condition a priori of all
phenomena. If we deduct our own peculiar sensibility,
then the idea of time disappears indeed, because it is
not inherent in any object, but only in the subject
which perceives that object. Space and time are
essential a priori ideas, and they are the
necessary conditions of all particular perceptions. From
the latter and their objects we can, in imagination
without exception, abstract; from the former we cannot.
Space and time are therefore to be regarded as the
necessary a priori pre- conditions of the
possibility and reality of all phenomena. It is clear
that 'transcendental aesthetic' can obtain only these
two elements, space and time, because all other concepts
belong to the senses and pre-suppose experience, and so
imply something empirical. For example, the concept of
motion pre-supposes something moving, but in space
regarded alone there is nothing that moves; therefore,
whatever moves must be recognized by experience, and is
a purely empirical datum.
II--TRANSCENDENTAL LOGIC
OUR knowledge is derived from two fundamental sources of
the consciousness. The first is the faculty of
receptivity of impressions; the second, the faculty of
cognition of an object by means of these impressions or
representations, this second power being sometimes
styled spontaneity of concepts. By the first, an object
is given to us; by the second it is thought of in the
mind. Thus intuition and concepts constitute the
elements of our entire knowledge, for neither intuition
without concepts, nor concepts without intuition can
yield any knowledge whatever. Hence arise two branches
of science, 'aesthetic' and logic, the former being the
science of the rules of sensibility; the latter, the
science of the rules of understanding.
Logic can be treated in two directions; either as logic
of the general use of the understanding, or of some
particular use of it. The former includes the rules of
thought, without which there can be no use of the
understanding; but it has no regard to the objects to
which the understanding is applied. This is elementary
logic. But logic of the understanding in some particular
use includes rules of correct thought in relation to
special classes of objects; and this latter logic is
generally taught in schools as preliminary to the study
of sciences.
Thus, general logic takes no account of any of the
contents of knowledge, but is limited simply to the
consideration of the forms of thought. But we are
constrained by anticipation to form an idea of a logical
science which has to deal not only with pure thought,
but also has to determine the origin, validity and
extent of the knowledge to which intuitions relate, and
this might be styled transcendental logic.
In 'transcendental aesthetic' we isolated the faculty of
sensibility. So in transcendental logic we isolate the
understanding, concentrating our consideration on that
element of thought which has its source simply in the
understanding. But transcendental logic must be divided
into transcendental analytic and transcendental
dialectic. The former is a logic of truth, and is
intended to furnish a canon of criticism. When logic is
used to judge not analytically, but to judge
synthetically of objects in general, it is called
transcendental dialectic, which serves as a protection
against sophistical fallacy.
Analytic of Pure Concepts
The
understanding may be defined as the faculty of judging.
The function of thought in a judgement can come under
four heads, each with three subdivisions.
1
Quantity of judgements:
Universal, particular, singular.
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2 Quality
Affirmative, negative, infinite. |
3 Relation
Categorical, hypothetical, disjunctive. |
4
Modality
Problematical, assertory, apodictic (above
contradiction).
If we
examine each of these forms of judgement we discover
that in every one is involved some peculiar idea which
is its essential characteristic. Thus, a singular
judgement, in which the subject of discourse is a single
object, involves obviously the special idea of oneness,
or unity. A particular judgement, relating to several
objects, implies the idea of plurality, and
discriminates between the several objects. Now the whole
list of these ideas will constitute the complete
classification of the fundamental conceptions of the
understanding, regarded as the faculty which judges, and
these may be called categories.
TABLE OF THE CATEGORIES
|
1 Of Quantity
Unity
Plurality
Totality. |
2 Of Quality
Reality
Negation
Limitation |
3 Of
Relation
Substance and accident
Cause and effect
Action and reaction.
4 Of
Modality
Possibility – impossibility
Existence - non – existence
Necessity - contingence
These,
then, are the fundamental, primary, or native
conceptions of the understanding, which flow from, or
constitute the mechanism of, its nature; are inseparable
from its activity; and are hence for human thought,
universal and necessary, or a priori. These
categories are 'pure' conceptions of the understanding,
inasmuch as they are independent of all that is
contingent in sense.
Transcendental Dialectic
A distinction is usually made between what is
immediately known and what is only inferred. In every
syllogism is first a fundamental proposition; secondly,
another deduced from it; and, thirdly, the consequence.
In the use of pure reason its concepts, or
transcendental ideas aim at unity of all conditions of
thought. So all transcendental ideas may be arranged in
three classes; the first containing the unity of the
thinking subject; the second, the unity of the
conditions of phenomena observed; the third, the unity
of the objective conditions of thought.
This classification becomes clear if we note that the
thinking subject is the object-matter of psychology;
while the system of all phenomena (the world) is the
object-matter of cosmology; and the Being of all Beings
(God) is the object- matter of theology.
Hence we perceive that pure reason supplies three
transcendental ideas, namely, the idea of a
transcendental science of the soul (psychologia
rationalis); of a transcendental science of the world
(cosmologia rationalis); and, lastly, of a
transcendental science of God (theologia
transcendentalis). It is the glory of transcendental
idealism that by it the mind ascends in the series of
conditions till it reaches the unconditioned, that is,
the principles. We thus progress from our knowledge of
self to a knowledge of the world, and through it to a
knowledge of the Supreme Being.
III--THE ANTINOMIES OF PURE REASON
TRANSCENDENTAL reason attempts to reconcile conflicting
assertions. There are four of these antinomies, or
conflicts.
FIRST
ANTINOMY.
|
Thesis. The world has a beginning in
time, and is also limited in regard to
space. |
Antithesis. The world has neither
beginning in time, nor limit in space, but
in both regards is infinite.
|
|
Proof. Were the world without a
time-beginning we should have to ascribe a
present limit to that which can have no
limit, which is absurd. Again, were the
world not limited in regard to space, it
must be conceived as an infinite whole, yet
it is impossible thus to conceive it. |
Proof. The world must have existed
from eternity, or it could never exist at
all. If we imagine it had a beginning, we
must imagine an anterior time when nothing
was. But in such time the origin of anything
is impossible. At no moment could any cause
for such a beginning exist. |
SECOND
ANTINOMY.
|
Thesis. Every composite substance in
the world is composed of simple parts.
|
Antithesis. No composite thing in the
world consists of simple parts, and nothing
simple exists anywhere in the world. |
|
Proof. This thesis seems scarcely to
require proof. No one can deny that a
composite substance consists of parts, and
that these parts, if themselves composite,
must consist of others less composite, till
at length we come, by compulsion of thought,
to the conception of the absolutely simple
as that wherein the substantial consists. |
Proof. Each simple part implied in
the thesis must be in space. But this
condition is a positive disproof of their
possibility. A simple substance would have
to occupy a simple portion of space; but
space has no simple parts. The supposition
of such a part is the supposition, not of
space, but of the negation of space. A
simple substance, in existing and occupying
any portion of space, must contain a real
multiplicity of parts external to each
other, i.e. it must contradict its own
nature, which is absurd. |
THIRD
ANTINOMY.
|
Thesis. The causality of natural law
is insufficient for the explanation of all
the phenomena of the universe. For this end
another kind of causality must be assumed,
whose attribute is freedom. |
Antithesis. All events in the
universe occur under the exclusive operation
of natural laws, and there is no such thing
as freedom. |
|
Proof. All so-called natural causes
are effects of preceding causes, forming a
regressive series of indefinite extent, with
no first beginning. So we never arrive at an
adequate cause of any phenomenon. Yet
natural law has for its central demand that
nothing shall happen without such a cause. |
Proof. The idea of a free cause is an
absurdity. For it contradicts the very law
of causation itself, which demands that
every event shall be in orderly sequence
with some preceding event. Now, free
causation is such an event, being the active
beginning of a series of phenomena. Yet the
action of the supposed free cause must be
imagined as independent of all connexion
with any previous event. It is without law
or reason, and would be the blind
realization of confusion and lawlessness.
Therefore transcendental freedom is a
violation of the law of causation, and is in
conflict with all experience. We must of
necessity acquiesce in the explanation of
all phenomena by the operation of natural
law, and thus transcendental freedom must be
pronounced a fallacy. |
FOURTH
ANTINOMY.
|
Thesis. Some form of absolutely
necessary existence belongs to the world,
whether as its part or as its cause. |
Antithesis. There is no absolutely
necessary existence, whether in the world as
its part, or outside of it as its cause. |
|
Proof. Phenomenal existence is
serial, mutable, consistent. Every event is
contingent upon a preceding condition. The
conditioned presupposes, for its complete
explanation, the unconditioned. The whole of
past time, since it contains the whole of
all past conditions, must of necessity
contain the unconditioned or also
'absolutely necessary.' |
Proof. Of unconditionally necessary
existence within the world there can be
none. The assumption of a first
unconditioned link in the chain of cosmical
conditions is self-contradictory. For such
link or cause, being in time, must be
subject to the law of all temporal
existence, and so be determined - contrary
to the original assumption - by another link
or cause before it. The supposition of an
absolutely necessary cause of the world,
existing without the world, also destroys
itself. For, being outside the world, it is
not in time. And yet, to act as a cause, it
must be in time. This supposition is
therefore absurd. |
The
theses in these four antinomies constitute the teaching
of philosophical dogmatism. The antitheses constitute
doctrines of philosophical empiricism.
IV--CRITICISM OF THE CHIEF ARGUMENTS FOR THE
EXISTENCE OF GOD
THE ontological argument aims at asserting the
possibility of conceiving the idea of an ens
realissimum, of being possessed of all reality. But the
idea of existence and the fact of existence are two very
different things. Whatever I conceive, or sensibly
imagine, I necessarily conceive as though it were
existing. Though my pocket be empty, I may conceive it
to contain a 'hundred thalers.' If I conceive them
there, I can only conceive them as actually existing
there. But, alas, the fact that I am under this
necessity of so conceiving by no means carries with it a
necessity that the coins should really be in my pocket.
That can only be determined by experience.
The cosmological argument contends that if anything
exists, there must also exist an absolutely necessary
being. Now, at least I myself exist. Hence there exists
an absolutely necessary being. The argument coincides
with that by which the thesis of the fourth antinomy is
supposed. The objections to it are summed up in the
proof of the antithesis of the fourth antinomy. As soon
as we have recognized the true conception of causality,
we have already transcended the sensible world.
The physico-theological or teleological argument is what
is often styled the argument from design. It proceeds
not from general, but particular experience. Nature
discloses manifold signs of wise intention and
harmonious order, and these are held to betoken a divine
designer. This argument deserves always to be treated
with respect. It is the oldest and clearest of all
proofs, and best adapted to convince the reason of the
mass of mankind. It animates us in our study of nature.
And it were not only a cheerless, but an altogether vain
task to attempt to detract from the persuasive authority
of this proof. There is naught to urge against its
rationality and its utility.
All arguments, however, to prove the existence of God
must, in order to be theoretically valid, start from
specifically and exclusively sensible or phenomenal
data, must employ only the conceptions of pure physical
science, and must end with demonstrating in sensible
experience an object congruous with, or corresponding
to, the idea of God. But this requirement cannot be met,
for, scientifically speaking, the existence of an
absolutely necessary God cannot be either proved or
disproved. Hence room is left for faith in any moral
proofs that may present themselves to us, apart from
science. With this subject ethics, the science of
practice or of practical reason, will have to deal.
The
Critique of Practical Reason
by Immanuel Kant,
1788
Edited by
Glyn
Hughes
© 2002
I--ANALYTIC OF PRACTICAL REASON
PRACTICAL principles are propositions containing a
general determination of the will. They are maxims, or
subjective propositions, when expressing the will of an
individual; objective, when they are valid expressions
of the will of rational beings generally.
Practical principles which presuppose an object of
desire are empirical, or experimental, and supply no
practical laws. Reason, in the scope of a practical law,
influences the will not by the medium of pleasure or
pain. All rational beings necessarily wish for
happiness, but they are not all agreed either as to the
means to attain it, or as to the objects of their
enjoyment of it. To discover any law which would bring
all men into harmony is absolutely impossible.
One of the problems of practical reason is to find the
law which can necessarily determine the will, assuming
that the will is free. The solution of this problem is
to be found in action according to the moral law. We
should so act that the maxim of our will can always be
valid as a principle of universal legislation.
Experience shows how the moral consciousness determines
freedom of the will.
Suppose that someone affirms of his inclination for
sensual pleasure that he cannot possibly resist
temptation to indulgence. If a gallows were erected at
the place where he is tempted on which he should be
hanged immediately after satiating his passions, would
he not be able to control his inclination? We need not
long doubt what would be his answer.
But ask him, if his sovereign commanded him to bear
false witness against an honourable man, under penalty
of death, whether he would hold it possible to conquer
his love of life. He might not venture to say what he
would choose, but he would certainly admit that it is
possible to make choice. Thus, he judges that he can
choose to do a thing because he is conscious of moral
obligation, and he thus recognizes for himself a freedom
of will of which, but for the moral law, he would never
have been conscious.
We obtain the exact opposite of the principle of
morality if we adopt the principle of personal private
happiness as the determining motive of the will. This
contradiction is not only logical, but also practical.
For morality would be totally destroyed were not the
voice of reason as clear and penetrating in relation to
the will, even to the most ordinary men.
If one of your friends, after bearing false witness
against you, attempted to justify his base conduct by
enumerating the advantages which he had thus secured for
himself and by declaring that thus he performed a true
human duty, you would either laugh him to scorn or turn
from him in horror. And yet, if a man acts for his own
selfish ends, you have not the slightest objection to
such behaviour.
Morality and Happiness
THE maxim of self love simply advises; the law of
morality commands. There is a vast difference between
what we are advised and what we are obliged to do. No
practical laws can be based on the principle of
happiness, even on that of universal happiness, for the
knowledge of this happiness rests on merely empirical or
experimental data, every man's ideas of it being
conditioned only on his individual opinion. Therefore,
this principle of happiness cannot prescribe rules for
all rational beings.
But the moral law demands prompt obedience from
everyone, and thus even the most ordinary intelligence
can discern what should be done. Everyone has power to
comply with the dictates of morality, but even with
regard to any single aim it is not easy to satisfy the
vague precept of happiness. Nothing could be more absurd
than a command that everyone should make himself happy,
for one never commands anyone to do what he inevitably
wishes to do. Finally, in the idea of our practical
reason, there is something which accompanies the
violation of a moral law--namely, its demerit, with the
consciousness that punishment is a natural consequence.
Therefore, punishment should be connected in the idea of
practical reason with crime, by the principles of moral
legislation.
Analysis of Principles
THE practical material principles of determination
constituting the basis of morality may be thus
classified.
1. SUBJECTIVE.--External: Education; the civil
constitution. Internal: Physical feeling; moral feeling.
2. OBJECTIVE.--Internal: Perfection. External: Will of
God.
The subjective elements are all experimental, or
empirical, and cannot supply the universal principle of
morality, though they are expounded in that sense by
such writers as Montaigne, Mandeville, Epicurus and
Hutcheson.
But the objective elements, as enunciated and expounded
by Wolf and the Stoics, and by Crusius and other
theological moralists, are founded on reason, for
absolute perfection as a quality of things (that is, God
Himself) can only be thought of by rational concepts.
The concept of perfection in a practical sense is the
adequacy of a thing for various ends. As a human quality
(and so internal) this is simply talent, and what
completes it is skill. But supreme perfection in
substance, that is, God Himself, and therefore external
(considered practically), is the adequacy of this being
for all purposes. All the principles above classified
are material, and so can never furnish the supreme moral
law. For even the Divine will can supply a motive in the
human mind because of the expectation of happiness from
it.
Therefore, the formal practical principle of the pure
reason insists that the mere form of a universal
legislation must constitute the ultimate determining
principle of the will. Here is the only possible
practical principle which is sufficient to furnish
categorical imperatives, that is, practical laws which
make action a duty.
It follows from this analytic that pure reason cannot be
practical. It can determine the will independently of
all merely experimental elements.
There is a remarkable contrast between the working of
the pure speculative reason and that of the pure
practical reason. In the former--as was shown in the
treatise on that subject--a pure, sensible intuition of
time and space made knowledge possible, though knowledge
only of objects of the senses.
On the contrary, the moral law brings before us a fact
absolutely inexplicable from any of the data of the
world of sense. And the entire range of our theoretical
use of reason indicates a pure world of understanding,
which even positively determines it, and enables us to
know something of it--namely, a law.
We must observe the distinction between the laws of a
system of nature to which the will is subject, and of a
system of nature which is subject to the will. In the
former, the objects cause the ideas which determine the
will; in the latter, the objects are caused by the will.
Hence, causality of the will has its determining
principle exclusively in the faculty of pure reason,
which may, therefore, also be called a pure practical
reason.
The moral law is a law of the causality through freedom,
and therefore of the possibility of a super-sensible
system of nature. It determines the will by imposing on
its maxim the condition of a universal legislative form,
and thus it is able for the first time to impart
practical reality to reason, which otherwise would
continue to be transcendent when seeking to proceed
speculatively with its ideas.
Thus the moral law induces a stupendous change. It
changes the transcendent use of reason into the immanent
use. And in result reason itself becomes, by its ideas,
an efficient cause in the field of experience.
Hume and Scepticism
IT may be said of David Hume that he initiated the
attack on pure reason. My own labours in the
investigation of this subject were occasioned by his
sceptical teaching. He argued that without experience it
is impossible to know the difference between one thing
in itself and another; that is, we cannot know a
priori, and, therefore, the notion of a cause is
fictitious and illusory, arising only from the habit of
observing certain things associated with each in a
succession of connexions.
On such principles we can never come to any conclusion
as to causes and effects. We can never predict a
consequence from any of the known attributes of things.
We can never say of any event that it must necessarily
have followed from another; that is, that it must have
had an antecedent cause. And we could never lay down a
rule derived even from the greatest number of
observations. Hence we must trust entirely to blind
chance, abolishing all reason, and such a surrender
establishes empiricism in an impregnable citadel.
Mathematics escaped Hume, because he considered that its
propositions were analytical, proceeding from one
determination to another, by reason of identity
contained in each. But this is not really so, for, on
the contrary, they are synthetical, the results
depending ultimately on the assent of observers as
witnesses to the universality of propositions.
My investigations led me to the conclusion that the
objects with which we are familiar are by no means
things in themselves, but are simply phenomena,
connected in a certain way with experience. So that
without contradiction they cannot be separated from that
connexion. Only by that experience can they be
recognized. I was able to prove the objective reality of
the concept of cause in regard to objects of experience,
and to demonstrate its origin from pure understanding,
without experimental or empirical sources.
Thus, I first destroyed the source of scepticism, and
then the resulting scepticism itself. And thus was
subverted the thorough doubt as to whatever theoretic
reason claims to perceive, as well as the claim of Hume
that the concept of causality involved something
absolutely unthinkable.
Good and Evil
BY a concept of practical reason, I understand the
representation to the mind of an object as an effect
possible to be produced through freedom. The only
objects of practical reason are good and evil. For by
'good' we understand an object necessarily desired and
by 'evil' one necessarily abhorred, reason actuating the
mind in each case.
In the common use of language we uniformly distinguish
between the 'good' and the 'pleasant,' the 'evil' and
the 'unpleasant,' good and evil being judged by reason
alone. The judgement on the relation of means to ends
certainly belongs to reason. But 'good' or 'evil' always
implies only a reference to the 'will,' as resolved by
the law of reason, to make something its object.
Thus good and evil properly relate to actions, not to
personal sensations. Hence, only the maxim of the will,
and consequently the person himself, can be called good
or evil, not the thing itself.
The Stoic was right, even though he might be laughed at,
who during violent attacks of gout exclaimed, 'Pain, I
will never admit that thou art an evil!' What he felt
was indeed what we call a bad thing; but he had no
reason to admit that any evil attached thereby to
himself, for the pain did not in the least detract from
his personal worth, but only from that of his condition.
If a single lie had been on his conscience it would have
humiliated his soul; but pain seemed only to elevate it,
when he was not conscious of having deserved it as a
punishment for any unjust deed.
The rule of judgement subject to the laws of pure
practical reason is this: Ask yourself whether if the
action you propose were to happen by a natural system of
law, of which you were yourself a part, you could regard
it as possible by your own will? In fact, everyone does
decide by this rule whether actions are morally good or
evil.
II--DIALECTIC OF PRACTICAL REASON
The Immortality of the Soul
PURE practical reason postulates the immortality of the
soul, for reason in the pure and practical sense aims at
the perfect good (summum bonum), and this perfect good
is only possible on the supposition of the soul's
immortality. It is the moral law which determines the
will, and in his will the perfect harmony of the mind
with the moral law is the supreme condition of the
summum bonum.
The principle of the moral destination of our
nature--that only by endless progress can we come into
full harmony with the moral law--is of the greatest use,
not only for fortifying the speculative reason, but also
with respect to religion. In default of this, either the
moral law is degraded from its holiness, being
represented as indulging our convenience, or else men
strain after an unattainable aim, hoping to gain
absolute holiness of will, thus losing themselves in
fanatical theosophic dreams utterly contradicting
self-knowledge.
For a rational, but finite, being the only possibility
is an endless progression from the lower to the higher
degrees of perfection. The Infinite Being, to whom the
time condition is nothing, sees in this endless
succession the perfect harmony with the moral law.
The Existence of God
THE pure practical reason must also postulate the
existence of God as the necessary condition of the
attainment of the summum bonum. As the perfect good can
only be promoted by accordance of the will with the
moral law, so also this summum bonum is possible only
through the supremacy of an Infinite Being possessed of
causality harmonising with morality. But the postulate
of the highest derived good (sometimes denominated the
best world) coincides with the postulate of a highest
original good, or of the existence of God.
We now perceive why the Greeks could never solve their
problem of the possibility of the summum bonum, because
they made the freedom of the human will the only and
all-sufficient ground of happiness, imagining there was
no need for the existence of God for that end.
Christianity alone affords an idea of the summum bonum
which answers fully to the requirement of practical
reason. That idea is the Kingdom of God.
The holiness which the Christian law requires makes
essential an infinite progress. But just for that very
reason it justifies in man the hope of endless
existence. And it is only from an Infinite Supreme
Being, morally perfect, holy, good and with an
omnipotent will, that we can hope, by accord with His
will, to attain the summum bonum, which the moral law
enjoins on us as our duty to seek ever to attain.
The moral law does not enjoin on us to render ourselves
happy, but instructs us how to become worthy of
happiness. Morality must never be regarded as a doctrine
of happiness, or direction how to become happy, its
province being to inculcate the rational condition of
happiness, not the means of attaining it. God's design
in creating the world is not primarily the happiness of
the rational beings in it, but the summum bonum, which
super-adds another condition to that desire of human
beings, namely, the condition of deserving such
happiness. That is to say, the morality of rational
beings is a condition which alone includes the rule by
observing which they can hope to participate in
happiness at the hand of an all- wise Creator.
The highest happiness can only be conceived as possible
under conditions harmonising with the divine holiness.
Thus they are right who make the glory of God the chief
end of creation. For beyond all else that can be
conceived, that glorifies God which is the most
estimable thing in the whole world, honour for His
command and obedience to His law, when to this is added
His glorious design to crown so beauteous an order of
things with happiness corresponding.
Conclusion
TWO things fill the mind with ever new and increasing
wonder--the starry heavens above me, and the moral law
within me. I need not search for them, and vaguely guess
concerning them, as if they were veiled in darkness or
hidden in the infinite altitude. I see them before me,
and link them immediately with the consciousness of my
existence. The former begins from the spot I occupy in
the outer world of sense, and enlarges my connexion with
it to a boundless extent with worlds upon worlds and
systems of systems.
The second begins with my invisible self, my
personality, and places me in a truly infinite world
traceable only by the understanding, with which I
perceive I am in an universal and necessary connexion,
as I am also thereby with all those visible worlds.
This view infinitely elevates my value as an
intelligence by my personality, in which the moral law
reveals to me a life independent of the animal and even
the whole material world, and reaching by destiny into
the infinite.
But though admiration may stimulate inquiry, it cannot
compensate for the want of it. The contemplation of the
world, beginning with the most magnificent spectacle
possible, ended in astrology; and morality, beginning
with the noblest attribute of human nature, ended in
superstition. But after reason was applied to careful
examination of the phenomena of nature a clear and
unchangeable insight was secured into the system of the
world. We may entertain the hope of a like good result
in treating of the moral capacities of our nature by the
help of the moral judgement of reason.

Immanuel Kant
1724-1804
Kant's grave
in Kaliningrad Cemetery, Kaliningrad, Russia

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