Kant's Categorical Imperative

363 Words1 Page

Kant’s moral theory grounded in a categorical imperative is that it is “a requirement of reason that applies to us regardless of what we care about” (Kant, 107). Another words, we must help those in need even if you really do not want too or feel that it can help ourselves in any way. He uses the ground principle that “rational nature exists as an end in itself” (Kant, 117). Kant also believes there is a hypothetical imperative and a categorical imperative. A hypothetical imperative is the when a “action would be good merely as a means to something else” (Kant, 113). While a categorical imperative is “if the action is represented as in itself good, hence as necessary in a will in itself conforming to reason, as its principle” (Kant, 113). Kant’s

Open Document