The Experience Machine By Immannuel Kant

773 Words2 Pages

Maggie Fitzgerald was raised knowing one thing; she was trash. She had no true family that cared for her. No one even really knew she existed. The only person who gave her hope was her father. That was true up until she found the sport boxing and met Frankie. She earned everything through blood, sweat, and tears. Even when people were telling her she couldn’t do it, she still tried. Through all of this Maggie gained freedom, personhood, and experience. Freedom according to Immanuel Kant is the ability to guide ones actions using laws of one’s own making. Maggie gains freedom through her pursuance of boxing. Kant said that I am free only if I act out of categorical imperative one and categorical imperative two, beyond necessity and personal interest. Categorical imperative one and two state “act as if your actions could be elevated into a universal law” and “always treat people as ends and never means”. If Maggie’s actions were made into a universal law and everyone tried as hard as she did, the world would be a better …show more content…

He made it so the person would not be able to know the difference between the machine and real life. I think that if she had a chance to plug into Nozicks’ experience machine that she would have still done it the same way all over again. She gained and experienced so much in a year and a half than she did in her whole life. She grew both stronger and intelligent. I also think she still would have plugged in the same risks because she got everything she wanted in such a short period of time. She enjoyed her life and found it very pleasurable. If she made it so that Billie were to miss the punch and not cause her to break her neck, she would not have had the same pleasurable experience with Frankie. Maggie gained experience through boxing. She deserved every ounce of her

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