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B. Kant. Critique of Practical Reason
2. The second subject of review in Kant’s
philosophy is the practical sphere, the nature
and principle of the will; this subject is
dealt with in the Critique of Practical Reason,
in which Kant accepted Rousseau’s conclusion
that the will is absolutely free. Kant’s
idea of theoretic Reason is that when Reason
relates itself to an object, this object
must be given to it; but when the object
is given by Reason to itself, it has no truth;
and Reason in knowledge of this kind does
not arrive at independence. As practical,
on the contrary, Reason is independent in
itself; as a moral Being man is free, raised
above all natural law and above all phenomena.
As the theoretic Reason had in itself categories,
a priori distinctions, so practical Reason
has in turn the moral law in general, the
further determinations of which are constituted
by the notions of duty and right, lawful
and unlawful; and here Reason disdains all
the given material which was necessary to
it on the theoretic side. The will determines
itself within itself; all that is right and
moral rests on freedom; in this man has his
absolute self-consciousness.(29) On this
side self-consciousness finds essential reality
in itself, as theoretical Reason found it
in an “other”; and in the first place, indeed,
the ego in its individuality is immediate
reality, universality, objectivity; in the
second place subjectivity strives after reality,
but not after sensuous reality such as we
had before, for here Reason holds itself
to be the real. Here we have the Notion which
is sensible of its own deficiency; this theoretic
Reason could not be, as in it the Notion
had to remain the Notion. Thus we have the
standpoint of absoluteness revealed, since
there is an infinite disclosed within the
human breast. The satisfying part in Kant’s
philosophy is that the truth is at least
set within the heart; and hence I acknowledge
that, and that alone, which is in conformity
with my determined nature.
a. Kant divides will into lower and higher
faculties of desire; this expression is not
inapt. The lower faculties of desire are
impulses, inclinations, etc.; the higher
faculty is the will as such, which has not
external, individual aims, but universal.
To the question what the principle of will
that should determine man in his actions
is, all sorts of answers have been given;
for instance, self-love, benevolence, happiness,
etc. Such material principles of action,
Kant now says, are all reducible to impulses,
to happiness; but the rational in itself
is purely formal, and consists in the maxim
that what is to hold good as law, must be
capable of being thought of as a law of universal
application, without destroying itself. All
morality of action now rests upon the conviction
that the act is done with consciousness of
the law, for the sake of the law and out
of respect for the law and for itself, without
any regard to what makes for happiness. As
a moral Being man has the moral law in himself,
the principle of which is freedom and autonomy
of the will; for the will is absolute spontaneity.
Determinations which are taken from the inclinations
are heterogeneous principles as regards the
will; or the will is heteronomy if it takes
such determinations as its end and aim; for
in that case it takes its determinations
from something else than itself. But the
essence of the will is to determine itself
from itself; for practical Reason gives itself
laws. But the empirical will is heteronomous,
for it is determined by desires; and they
belong to our nature, not to the realm of
freedom.(30)
It is a highly important point in the Kantian
philosophy that what self-consciousness esteems
reality, law, and implicit Being, is brought
back within itself. While a man is striving
after this aim and that, according as he
judges the world or history in one way or
the other, what is he to take as his ultimate
aim? For the will, however, there is no other
aim than that derived from itself, the aim
of its freedom. It is a great advance when
the principle is established that freedom
is the last hinge on which man turns, a highest
possible pinnacle, which allows nothing further
to be imposed upon it; thus man bows to no
authority, and acknowledges no obligations,
where his freedom is not respected. Great
popularity has from one point of view been
won for Kantian philosophy by the teaching
that man finds in himself an absolutely firm,
unwavering centre-point; but with this last
principle it has come to a standstill. While
the highest pinnacle of the theoretic Reason
is abstract identity, because it can furnish
only a canon, a rule for abstract classifications,(31)
practical Reason, as law-giving, is immediately
regarded as concrete; the law which it gives
to itself is the moral law. But even if it
is stated that it is concrete in itself,
there is the further consideration that this
freedom is at first only the negative of
everything else; no bond, nothing external,
lays me under an obligation. It is to this
extent indeterminate; it is the identity
of the will with itself, its at-homeness
with itself. But what is the content of this
law? Here we at once come back to the lack
of content. For the sole form of this principle
is nothing more or less than agreement with
itself, universality; the formal principle
of legislation in this internal solitude
comes to no determination, or this is abstraction
only. The universal, the non-contradiction
of self, is without content, something which
comes to be reality in the practical sphere
just as little as in the theoretical. The
universal moral law Kant therefore expresses
thus (and the setting up of such a universal
form was at all times the demand of the abstract
understanding): “Act from maxims” (the law
is also to be my particular law), “which
are capable of becoming universal laws.”(32)
Thus for the determination of duty (for the
question which meets us is, what is duty
for the free will) Kant has contributed nothing
but the form of identity, which is the law
of abstract Understanding. To defend one’s
fatherland, to promote the happiness of another,
is a duty, not because of the content, but
because it is duty; as with the Stoics, what
was thought was true for the very reason
that, and in so far as it was thought (Vol.
II., pp. 254, 260, 263). The content as such
is indeed not what holds good universally
in the moral law, because it contradicts
itself. For benevolence, for instance, enjoins:
“Give your possessions to the poor,” but
if all give away what they have, beneficence
is done away with (Vol. I., pp. 417,418).
Even with abstract identity, however, we
do not get a step further, for every content
which is put into this form is by being so
put freed from self-contradiction. But nothing
would be lost if it were not put into this
form at all. With regard to property, for
instance, the law of my actions is this:
Property ought to be respected, for the opposite
of this cannot be universal law. That is
correct, but it is quite a formal determination:
If property is, then it is. Property is here
presupposed, but this determination may also
in the same way be omitted, and then there
is no contradiction involved in theft: If
there is no such thing as property, then
it is not respected. This is the defect in
the principle of Kant and Fichte, that it
is really formal; chill duty is the final
undigested lump left within the stomach,
the revelation given to Reason.
The first postulate in practical Reason is
thus free, independent will which determines
itself, but this concrete is still abstract.
The second and third are forms which remind
us that the will is concrete in a higher
sense.
b. The second point is the connection of
the Notion of the will with the particular
will of the individual; the concrete is here
the fact that my particular will and the
universal will are identical, or that I am
a moral human being. The unity, that man
should be moral, is postulated; but beyond
the "should" and this talk of morality,
no advance is made. It is not said what is
moral; and no thought is given to a system
of the self-realizing spirit. For really,
as theoretic Reason stands opposed to the
objective of the senses, so practical Reason
stands opposed to the practical sensuousness,
to impulses and inclinations. Perfected morality
must remain a Beyond; for morality presupposes
the difference of the particular and universal
will. It is a struggle, the determination
of the sensuous by the universal; the struggle
can only take place when the sensuous will
is not yet in conformity with the universal.
The result is, therefore, that the aim of
the moral will is to be attained in infinite
progress only; on this Kant founds (Kritik
der prakt Vernunft, pp. 219-223) the postulate
of the immortality of the soul, as the endless
progress of the subject in his morality,
because morality itself is incomplete, and
must advance into infinitude. The particular
will is certainly something other than the
universal will; but it is not ultimate or
really permanent.
c. The third point is the highest concrete,
the Notion of the freedom of all men, or
the natural world has to be in harmony with
the Notion of freedom. That is the postulate
of the existence of God, whom Reason, however,
does not recognize. Will has the whole world,
the whole of the sensuous, in opposition
to it, and yet Reason insists on the unity
of Nature or the moral law, as the Idea of
the Good, which is the ultimate end of the
world. Since, however, it is formal, and
therefore has no content on its own account,
it stands opposed to the impulses and inclinations
of a subjective and an external independent
Nature. Kant reconciles the contradiction
of the two (Kritik der prakt. Vernunft, pp.
198-200) in the thought of the highest Good,
in which Nature is conformed to rational
will, and happiness to virtue; — a harmony
which does not enter into the question at
all, although practical reality consists
therein. For happiness is only one’s own
sensuous consciousness, or the actuality
of a particular individual, not universal
reality in itself. The unification spoken
of itself therefore remains only a Beyond,
a thought, which is not actually in existence,
but only ought to be. Kant (Kritik der prakt.
Vernunft, pp.
205-209) thus agrees entirely with the talk
which alleges that in this world it often
fares ill with the good, and well with the
wicked, and so on; and he postulates further
the existence of God as the Being, the causality,
through whom this harmony comes to pass,
on behalf both of the sanctity of the moral
law, and of the rational end to be attained
in Nature, but only in infinite progress;
which postulate, like that of the immortality
of the soul, allows the contradiction to
remain as it is all the time, and express
only in the abstract that the reconciliation
ought to come about. The postulate itself
is always there, because the Good is a Beyond
with respect to Nature; the law of necessity
and the law of liberty are different from
one another, and placed in this dualism.
Nature would remain Nature no longer, if
it were to become conformed to the Notion
of the Good; and thus there remains an utter
opposition between the two sides, because
they cannot unite. It is likewise necessary
to establish the unity of the two; but this
is never actual, for their separation is
exactly what is pre-supposed. Kant employs
popular language thus: evil ought to be overcome,
but yet must not have been overcome. God
is to him, therefore, only a faith, an opinion,
which is only subjectively, and not absolutely
true.(33) This result is also of a very popular
character.
These postulates express nothing but the
synthesis, devoid of thought, of the different
moments which contradict each other on every
hand; they are therefore a “nest”(34) of
contradictions. For instance, the immortality
of the soul is postulated on account of imperfect
morality, i. e. because it is infected with
sensuousness. But the sensuous is implied
in moral self-consciousness; the end, perfection,
is what really destroys morality as such.
Similarly the other aim, the harmony of the
sensuous and the rational, to an equal extent
abrogates morality; for that consists in
this very opposition of Reason to the sensuous.
The actuality of the God who produces harmony
is of such a character that it does not enter
into consciousness at all; it is accepted
by consciousness for the sake of harmony,
just as children make some kind of scarecrow,
and then agree with each other to pretend
to be afraid of it. The ground on which God
is accepted — that by the conception of a
holy law-giver the moral law may acquire
additional reverence — contradicts the fact
that morality really consists in reverence
for the law simply for its own sake.(35)
In Practical Reason self-consciousness esteems
itself to be implicit Being, as contrasted
with theoretic Reason, which assigns implicitude
to objective existence, but the one, we see,
attains just as little as the other to unity
and actuality in itself. It is hard for man
to believe that Reason actually exists; but
there is nothing real except Reason; it is
the absolute power. The vanity of man aspires
to have an ideal before him, in order to
be able to find fault with everything alike.
We possess all wisdom, it is within us, but
is not forthcoming. That is the ultimate
standpoint; it is a high standpoint, no doubt,
but in it the truth is never reached. The
absolute Good remains “what ought to be,”
or without objectivity; and there it has
to remain.
NOTES:
29. Kant: Kritik der prakt. Vernunft
(fourth
edition, Riga, 1797), pp. 3-11, 29-32.
30. Kant: Kritik d. prakt. Vernunft,
pp.
40, 41, 56, 126-135, 58, 38, 77.
31. Kant: Kritik der reinen Vernunft,
pp.
62, 500.
32. Kant: Kritik d. prakt. Vernunft,
pp.
54, 58 (35).
33. Kant: Kritik d. prakt. Vernunft,
pp.
223-227.
34. Cf. Kant’s Kritik d. reinen Vernunft,
p. 471.
35. Kant: Kritik der prakt. Vernunft, p.
146.
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