"For most of us..."
Posted by Erin on September 25, 1997 at 13:54:46:
In response to Kant rears his ugly head again... ;-), written by Helen on September 25, 1997 at 09:27:42
But isn't the innate morality we have an emotional one, rather than a rational one (not that I want to argue with Kant, of course)?
Not necessarily, one can argue (in fact I do) that in this context, the rational is the humanity, and contained therein is both the emotional and the analytic dispositions. I think rationality for Kant, like Plato, is strictly speaking not scientific, mathematical-type of critical thinking --connotations which are usually associated with the term; rather it is our humanity, our soul, for the lack of a better word. It's a priori (fundamental), and transcendent.
The rational morality is for most of us the learned one, and it is the one which says we should not yield to our impulse to react violently to those who break our innate moral codes.
Right, but your use of the term "the rational morality" is a derivative of the first, a priori concept of the rational. If I understand you correctly. ;-)
Erin
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