Immanuel Kant Deontology Essay

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Immanuel Kant viewed the world in a very black and white manner. Good vs. bad, right vs. wrong, truth vs. lie, and so on. Some acts in life are invariably wrong and some are morally correct. Unlike Utilitarianism where the historical references and consequences are taken into account of the outcome to know if the action was moral or immoral, Kant’s deontology focuses solely on the act and its morality. A situation that leads to a neutral or even good outcome as a direct result of an action does not make the action moral. A seemingly good consequence does not justify an immoral act. Kant believed that morality comes from the self. Morals themselves are systematic rules that you place upon oneself because humans are ubiquitously rational beings and Kant thought that humans had rational duties to each other. Kant’s deontology is rooted in the ability to make a decision objectively because it is universally good and making the incorrect decision, including lying, disrupts that universal objectivity.
In Kant’s …show more content…

The goodwill is unaffected by outside means. For example, if a cashier is given change by a customer and the cashier may give the customer the incorrect change to save some money. Although, the cashier gives the correct change because they were respecting the moral rules instead of doing it for pleasure or for the fear of getting caught (Philosophy Tube). Humans carry out their duties because they are the right thing to do, not because they serve the humans self-interest. In Kant’s second formulation of humanity, if every decision should be a rational action, it has to fall under principle and an end. It becomes a humans duty to impose or use other people as means to an end. Essentially, a person should not benefit off of someone else's suffering. Abiding by the principle is a given, but an action should have an end that is acceptable to everyone and does not exploit

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