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THE METAPHYSICAL ELEMENTS OF ETHICS
Immanuel Kant 1780
Translated by Thomas Kingsmill Abbott
PREFACE
If there exists on any subject a philosophy
(that is, a system of rational knowledge
based on concepts), then there must also
be for this philosophy a system of pure rational
concepts, independent of any condition of
intuition, in other words, a metaphysic.
It may be asked whether metaphysical elements
are required also for every practical philosophy,
which is the doctrine of duties, and therefore
also for Ethics, in order to be able to present
it as a true science (systematically), not
merely as an aggregate of separate doctrines
(fragmentarily). As regards pure jurisprudence,
no one will question this requirement; for
it concerns only what is formal in the elective
will, which has to be limited in its external
relations according to laws of freedom; without
regarding any end which is the matter of
this will. Here, therefore, deontology is
a mere scientific doctrine (doctrina scientiae).
*
* One who is acquainted with practical philosophy
is not, therefore, a practical philosopher.
The latter is he who makes the rational end
the principle of his actions, while at the
same time he joins with this the necessary
knowledge which, as it aims at action, must
not be spun out into the most subtile threads
of metaphysic, unless a legal duty is in
question; in which case meum and tuum must
be accurately determined in the balance of
justice, on the principle of equality of
action and action, which requires something
like mathematical proportion, but not in
the case of a mere ethical duty. For in this
case the question is not only to know what
it is a duty to do (a thing which on account
of the ends that all men naturally have can
be easily decided), but the chief point is
the inner principle of the will namely that
the consciousness of this duty be also the
spring of action, in order that we may be
able to say of the man who joins to his knowledge
this principle of wisdom that he is a practical
philosopher.
Now in this philosophy (of ethics) it seems
contrary to the idea of it that we should
go back to metaphysical elements in order
to make the notion of duty purified from
everything empirical (from every feeling)
a motive of action. For what sort of notion
can we form of the mighty power and herculean
strength which would be sufficient to overcome
the vice-breeding inclinations, if Virtue
is to borrow her "arms from the armoury
of metaphysics," which is a matter of
speculation that only few men can handle?
Hence all ethical teaching in lecture rooms,
pulpits, and popular books, when it is decked
out with fragments of metaphysics, becomes
ridiculous. But it is not, therefore, useless,
much less ridiculous, to trace in metaphysics
the first principles of ethics; for it is
only as a philosopher that anyone can reach
the first principles of this conception of
duty, otherwise we could not look for either
certainty or purity in the ethical teaching.
To rely for this reason on a certain feeling
which, on account of the effect expected
from it, is called moral, may, perhaps, even
satisfy the popular teacher, provided he
desires as the criterion of a moral duty
to consider the problem: "If everyone
in every case made your maxim the universal
law, how could this law be consistent with
itself?" But if it were merely feeling
that made it our duty to take this principle
as a criterion, then this would not be dictated
by reason, but only adopted instinctively
and therefore blindly.
{PREFACE ^paragraph 5}
But in fact, whatever men imagine, no moral
principle is based on any feeling, but such
a principle is really nothing else than an
obscurely conceived metaphysic which inheres
in every man's reasoning faculty; as the
teacher will easily find who tries to catechize
his pupils in the Socratic method about the
imperative of duty and its application to
the moral judgement of his actions. The mode
of stating it need not be always metaphysical,
and the language need not necessarily be
scholastic, unless the pupil is to be trained
to be a philosopher. But the thought must
go back to the elements of metaphysics, without
which we cannot expect any certainty or purity,
or even motive power in ethics.
If we deviate from this principle and begin
from pathological, or purely sensitive, or
even moral feeling (from what is subjectively
practical instead of what is objective),
that is, from the matter of the will, the
end, not from its form that is the law, in
order from thence to determine duties; then,
certainly, there are no metaphysical elements
of ethics, for feeling by whatever it may
be excited is always physical. But then ethical
teaching, whether in schools, or lecture-rooms,
etc., is corrupted in its source. For it
is not a matter of indifference by what motives
or means one is led to a good purpose (the
obedience to duty). However disgusting, then,
metaphysics may appear to those pretended
philosophers who dogmatize oracularly, or
even brilliantly, about the doctrine of duty,
it is, nevertheless, an indispensable duty
for those who oppose it to go back to its
principles even in ethics, and to begin by
going to school on its benches.
We may fairly wonder how, after all previous
explanations of the principles of duty, so
far as it is derived from pure reason, it
was still possible to reduce it again to
a doctrine of happiness; in such a way, however,
that a certain moral happiness not resting
on empirical causes was ultimately arrived
at, a self-contradictory nonentity. In fact,
when the thinking man has conquered the temptations
to vice, and is conscious of having done
his (often hard) duty, he finds himself in
a state of peace and satisfaction which may
well be called happiness, in which virtue
is her own reward. Now, says the eudaemonist,
this delight, this happiness, is the real
motive of his acting virtuously. The notion
of duty, says be, does not immediately determine
his will; it is only by means of the happiness
in prospect that he is moved to his duty.
Now, on the other hand, since he can promise
himself this reward of virtue only from the
consciousness of having done his duty, it
is clear that the latter must have preceded:
that is, be must feel himself bound to do
his duty before he thinks, and without thinking,
that happiness will be the consequence of
obedience to duty. He is thus involved in
a circle in his assignment of cause and effect.
He can only hope to be happy if he is conscious
of his obedience to duty: and he can only
be moved to obedience to duty if be foresees
that he will thereby become happy. But in
this reasoning there is also a contradiction.
For, on the one side, he must obey his duty,
without asking what effect this will have
on his happiness, consequently, from a moral
principle; on the other side, he can only
recognize something as his duty when he can
reckon on happiness which will accrue to
him thereby, and consequently on a pathological
principle, which is the direct opposite of
the former.
I have in another place (the Berlin Monatsschrift),
reduced, as I believe, to the simplest expressions
the distinction between pathological and
moral pleasure. The pleasure, namely, which
must precede the obedience to the law in
order that one may act according to the law
is pathological, and the process follows
the physical order of nature; that which
must be preceded by the law in order that
it may be felt is in the moral order. If
this distinction is not observed; if eudaemonism
(the principle of happiness) is adopted as
the principle instead of eleutheronomy (the
principle of freedom of the inner legislation),
the consequence is the euthanasia (quiet
death) of all morality.
{PREFACE ^paragraph 10}
The cause of these mistakes is no other than
the following: Those who are accustomed only
to physiological explanations will not admit
into their heads the categorical imperative
from which these laws dictatorially proceed,
notwithstanding that they feel themselves
irresistibly forced by it. Dissatisfied at
not being able to explain what lies wholly
beyond that sphere, namely, freedom of the
elective will, elevating as is this privilege,
that man has of being capable of such an
idea. They are stirred up by the proud claims
of speculative reason, which feels its power
so strongly in the fields, just as if they
were allies leagued in defence of the omnipotence
of theoretical reason and roused by a general
call to arms to resist that idea; and thus
they are at present, and perhaps for a long
time to come, though ultimately in vain,
to attack the moral concept of freedom and
if possible render it doubtful.
INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION TO THE METAPHYSICAL ELEMENTS
OF ETHICS
Ethics in ancient times signified moral philosophy
(philosophia moral is) generally, which was
also called the doctrine of duties. Subsequently
it was found advisable to confine this name
to a part of moral philosophy, namely, to
the doctrine of duties which are not subject
to external laws (for which in German the
name Tugendlehre was found suitable). Thus
the system of general deontology is divided
into that of jurisprudence (jurisprudentia),
which is capable of external laws, and of
ethics, which is not thus capable, and we
may let this division stand.
I. Exposition of the Conception of Ethics
The notion of duty is in itself already the
notion of a constraint of the free elective
will by the law; whether this constraint
be an external one or be self-constraint.
The moral imperative, by its categorical
(the unconditional ought) announces this
constraint, which therefore does not apply
to all rational beings (for there may also
be holy beings), but applies to men as rational
physical beings who are unholy enough to
be seduced by pleasure to the transgression
of the moral law, although they themselves
recognize its authority; and when they do
obey it, to obey it unwillingly (with resistance
of their inclination); and it is in this
that the constraint properly consists. *
Now, as man is a free (moral) being, the
notion of duty can contain only self-constraint
(by the idea of the law itself), when we
look to the internal determination of the
will (the spring), for thus only is it possible
to combine that constraint (even if it were
external) with the freedom of the elective
will. The notion of duty then must be an
ethical one.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 5}
* Man, however, as at the same time a moral
being, when he considers himself objectively,
which he is qualified to do by his pure practical
reason, (i. e., according to humanity in
his own person). finds himself holy enough
to transgress the law only unwillingly; for
there is no man so depraved who in this transgression
would not feel a resistance and an abhorrence
of himself, so that he must put a force on
himself. It is impossible to explain the
phenomenon that at this parting of the ways
(where the beautiful fable places Hercules
between virtue and sensuality) man shows
more propensity to obey inclination than
the law. For, we can only explain what happens
by tracing it to a cause according to physical
laws; but then we should not be able to conceive
the elective will as free. Now this mutually
opposed self-constraint and the inevitability
of it makes us recognize the incomprehensible
property of freedom.
The impulses of nature, then, contain hindrances
to the fulfilment of duty in the mind of
man, and resisting forces, some of them powerful;
and he must judge himself able to combat
these and to conquer them by means of reason,
not in the future, but in the present, simultaneously
with the thought; he must judge that he can
do what the law unconditionally commands
that be ought.
Now the power and resolved purpose to resist
a strong but unjust opponent is called fortitude
(fortitudo), and when concerned with the
opponent of the moral character within us,
it is virtue (virtus, fortitudo moralis).
Accordingly, general deontology, in that
part which brings not external, but internal,
freedom under laws is the doctrine of virtue.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 10}
Jurisprudence had to do only with the formal
condition of external freedom (the condition
of consistency with itself, if its maxim
became a universal law), that is, with law.
Ethics, on the contrary, supplies us with
a matter (an object of the free elective
will), an end of pure reason which is at
the same time conceived as an objectively
necessary end, i. e., as duty for all men.
For, as the sensible inclinations mislead
us to ends (which are the matter of the elective
will) that may contradict duty, the legislating
reason cannot otherwise guard against their
influence than by an opposite moral end,
which therefore must be given a priori independently
on inclination.
An end is an object of the elective will
(of a rational being) by the idea of which
this will is determined to an action for
the production of this object. Now I may
be forced by others to actions which are
directed to an end as means, but I cannot
be forced to have an end; I can only make
something an end to myself. If, however,
I am also bound to make something which lies
in the notions of practical reason an end
to myself, and therefore besides the formal
determining principle of the elective will
(as contained in law) to have also a material
principle, an end which can be opposed to
the end derived from sensible impulses; then
this gives the notion of an end which is
in itself a duty. The doctrine of this cannot
belong to jurisprudence, but to ethics, since
this alone includes in its conception self-constraint
according to moral laws.
For this reason, ethics may also be defined
as the system of the ends of the pure practical
reason. The two parts of moral philosophy
are distinguished as treating respectively
of ends and of duties of constraint. That
ethics contains duties to the observance
of which one cannot be (physically) forced
by others, is merely the consequence of this,
that it is a doctrine of ends, since to be
forced to have ends or to set them before
one's self is a contradiction.
Now that ethics is a doctrine of virtue (doctrina
officiorum virtutis) follows from the definition
of virtue given above compared with the obligation,
the peculiarity of which has just been shown.
There is in fact no other determination of
the elective will, except that to an end,
which in the very notion of it implies that
I cannot even physically be forced to it
by the elective will of others. Another may
indeed force me to do something which is
not my end (but only means to the end of
another), but he cannot force me to make
it my own end, and yet I can have no end
except of my own making. The latter supposition
would be a contradiction- an act of freedom
which yet at the same time would not be free.
But there is no contradiction in setting
before one's self an end which is also a
duty: for in this case I constrain myself,
and this is quite consistent with freedom.
* But how is such an end possible? That is
now the question. For the possibility of
the notion of the thing
(viz., that it is not self-contradictory)
is not enough to prove the possibility of
the thing itself (the objective reality of
the notion).
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 15}
* The less a man can be physically forced,
and the more he can be morally forced (by
the mere idea of duty), so much the freer
he is. The man, for example, who is of sufficiently
firm resolution and strong mind not to give
up an enjoyment which he has resolved on,
however much loss is shown as resulting therefrom,
and who yet desists from his purpose unhesitatingly,
though very reluctantly, when he finds that
it would cause him to neglect an official
duty or a sick father; this man proves his
freedom in the highest degree by this very
thing, that he cannot resist the voice of
duty.
II. Exposition of the Notion of an End which
is also a Duty
We can conceive the relation of end to duty
in two ways; either starting from the end
to find the maxim of the dutiful actions;
or conversely, setting out from this to find
the end which is also duty. jurisprudence
proceeds in the former way. It is left to
everyone's free elective will what end he
will choose for his action. But its maxim
is determined a priori; namely, that the
freedom of the agent must be consistent with
the freedom of every other according to a
universal law.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 20}
Ethics, however, proceeds in the opposite
way. It cannot start from the ends which
the man may propose to himself, and hence
give directions as to the maxims he should
adopt, that is, as to his duty; for that
would be to take empirical principles of
maxims, and these could not give any notion
of duty; since this, the categorical ought,
has its root in pure reason alone. Indeed,
if the maxims were to be adopted in accordance
with those ends (which are all selfish),
we could not properly speak of the notion
of duty at all. Hence in ethics the notion
of duty must lead to ends, and must on moral
principles give the foundation of maxims
with respect to the ends which we ought to
propose to ourselves.
Setting aside the question what sort of end
that is which is in itself a duty, and how
such an end is possible, it is here only
necessary to show that a duty of this kind
is called a duty of virtue, and why it is
so called.
To every duty corresponds a right of action
(facultas moral is generatim), but all duties
do not imply a corresponding right
(facultas juridica) of another to compel
any one, but only the duties called legal
duties. Similarly to all ethical obligation
corresponds the notion of virtue, but it
does not follow that all ethical duties are
duties of virtue. Those, in fact, are not
so which do not concern so much a certain
end (matter, object of the elective will),
but merely that which is formal in the moral
determination of the will (e. g., that the
dutiful action must also be done from duty).
It is only an end which is also duty that
can be called a duty of virtue. Hence there
are several of the latter kind
(and thus there are distinct virtues); on
the contrary, there is only one duty of the
former kind, but it is one which is valid
for all actions (only one virtuous disposition).
The duty of virtue is essentially distinguished
from the duty of justice in this respect;
that it is morally possible to be externally
compelled to the latter, whereas the former
rests on free self-constraint only. For finite
holy beings (which cannot even be tempted
to the violation of duty) there is no doctrine
of virtue, but only moral philosophy, the
latter being an autonomy of practical reason,
whereas the former is also an autocracy of
it. That is, it includes a consciousness-
not indeed immediately perceived, but rightly
concluded, from the moral categorical imperative-
of the power to become master of one's inclinations
which resist the law; so that human morality
in its highest stage can yet be nothing more
than virtue; even if it were quite pure (perfectly
free from the influence of a spring foreign
to duty), a state which is poetically personified
under the name of the wise man (as an ideal
to which one should continually approximate).
Virtue, however, is not to be defined and
esteemed merely as habit, and (as it is expressed
in the prize essay of Cochius) as a long
custom acquired by practice of morally good
actions. For, if this is not an effect of
well-resolved and firm principles ever more
and more purified, then, like any other mechanical
arrangement brought about by technical practical
reason, it is neither armed for all circumstances
nor adequately secured against the change
that may be wrought by new allurements.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 25}
REMARK
To virtue = + a is opposed as its logical
contradictory
(contradictorie oppositum) the negative lack
of virtue (moral weakness) = o; but vice
= a is its contrary (contrarie s. realiter
oppositum); and it is not merely a needless
question but an offensive one to ask whether
great crimes do not perhaps demand more strength
of mind than great virtues. For by strength
of mind we understand the strength of purpose
of a man, as a being endowed with freedom,
and consequently so far as he is master of
himself (in his senses) and therefore in
a healthy condition of mind. But great crimes
are paroxysms, the very sight of which makes
the man of healthy mind shudder. The question
would therefore be something like this: whether
a man in a fit of madness can have more physical
strength than if he is in his senses; and
we may admit this without on that account
ascribing to him more strength of mind, if
by mind we understand the vital principle
of man in the free use of his powers. For
since those crimes have their ground merely
in the power of the inclinations that weaken
reason, which does not prove strength of
mind, this question would be nearly the same
as the question whether a man in a fit of
illness can show more strength than in a
healthy condition; and this may be directly
denied, since the want of health, which consists
in the proper balance of all the bodily forces
of the man, is a weakness in the system of
these forces, by which system alone we can
estimate absolute health.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 30}
III. Of the Reason for conceiving an End
which is also a Duty
An end is an object of the free elective
will, the idea of which determines this will
to an action by which the object is produced.
Accordingly every action has its end, and
as no one can have an end without himself
making the object of his elective will his
end, hence to have some end of actions is
an act of the freedom of the agent, not an
affect of physical nature. Now, since this
act which determines an end is a practical
principle which commands not the means (therefore
not conditionally) but the end itself (therefore
unconditionally), hence it is a categorical
imperative of pure practical reason and one,
therefore, which combines a concept of duty
with that of an end in general.
Now there must be such an end and a categorical
imperative corresponding to it. For since
there are free actions, there must also be
ends to which as an object those actions
are directed. Amongst these ends there must
also be some which are at the same time (that
is, by their very notion) duties. For if
there were none such, then since no actions
can be without an end, all ends which practical
reason might have would be valid only as
means to other ends, and a categorical imperative
would be impossible; a supposition which
destroys all moral philosophy.
Here, therefore, we treat not of ends which
man actually makes to himself in accordance
with the sensible impulses of his nature,
but of objects of the free elective will
under its own laws- objects which he ought
to make his end. We may call the former technical
(subjective), properly pragmatical, including
the rules of prudence in the choice of its
ends; but the latter we must call the moral
(objective) doctrine of ends. This distinction
is, however, superfluous here, since moral
philosophy already by its very notion is
clearly separated from the doctrine of physical
nature (in the present instance, anthropology).
The latter resting on empirical principles,
whereas the moral doctrine of ends which
treats of duties rests on principles given
a priori in pure practical reason.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 35}
IV. What are the Ends which are also Duties?
They are: A. OUR OWN PERFECTION, B. HAPPINESS
OF OTHERS.
We cannot invert these and make on one side
our own happiness, and on the other the perfection
of others, ends which should be in themselves
duties for the same person.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 40}
For one's own happiness is, no doubt, an
end that all men have (by virtue of the impulse
of their nature), but this end cannot without
contradiction be regarded as a duty. What
a man of himself inevitably wills does not
come under the notion of duty, for this is
a constraint to an end reluctantly adopted.
It is, therefore, a contradiction to say
that a man is in duty bound to advance his
own happiness with all his power.
It is likewise a contradiction to make the
perfection of another my end, and to regard
myself as in duty bound to promote it. For
it is just in this that the perfection of
another man as a person consists, namely,
that he is able of himself to set before
him his own end according to his own notions
of duty; and it is a contradiction to require
(to make it a duty for me) that I should
do something which no other but himself can
do.
V. Explanation of these two Notions
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 45}
A. OUR OWN PERFECTION
The word perfection is liable to many misconceptions.
It is sometimes understood as a notion belonging
to transcendental philosophy; viz., the notion
of the totality of the manifold which taken
together constitutes a thing; sometimes,
again, it is understood as belonging to teleology,
so that it signifies the correspondence of
the properties of a thing to an end. Perfection
in the former sense might be called quantitative
(material), in the latter qualitative
(formal) perfection. The former can be one
only, for the whole of what belongs to the
one thing is one. But of the latter there
may be several in one thing; and it is of
the latter property that we here treat.
When it is said of the perfection that belongs
to man generally
(properly speaking, to humanity), that it
is in itself a duty to make this our end,
it must be placed in that which may be the
effect of one's deed, not in that which is
merely an endowment for which we have to
thank nature; for otherwise it would not
be duty. Consequently, it can be nothing
else than the cultivation of one's power
(or natural capacity) and also of one's will
(moral disposition) to satisfy the requirement
of duty in general. The supreme element in
the former (the power) is the understanding,
it being the faculty of concepts, and, therefore,
also of those concepts which refer to duty.
First it is his duty to labour to raise himself
out of the rudeness of his nature, out of
his animal nature more and more to humanity,
by which alone he is capable of setting before
him ends to supply the defects of his ignorance
by instruction, and to correct his errors;
he is not merely counselled to do this by
reason as technically practical, with a view
to his purposes of other kinds
(as art), but reason, as morally practical,
absolutely commands him to do it, and makes
this end his duty, in order that he may be
worthy of the humanity that dwells in him.
Secondly, to carry the cultivation of his
will up to the purest virtuous disposition,
that, namely, in which the law is also the
spring of his dutiful actions, and to obey
it from duty, for this is internal morally
practical perfection. This is called the
moral sense
(as it were a special sense, sensus moralis),
because it is a feeling of the effect which
the legislative will within himself exercises
on the faculty of acting accordingly. This
is, indeed, often misused fanatically, as
though
(like the genius of Socrates) it preceded
reason, or even could dispense with judgement
of reason; but still it is a moral perfection,
making every special end, which is also a
duty, one's own end.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 50}
B. HAPPINESS OF OTHERS
It is inevitable for human nature that a
should wish and seek for happiness, that
is, satisfaction with his condition, with
certainty of the continuance of this satisfaction.
But for this very reason it is not an end
that is also a duty. Some writers still make
a distinction between moral and physical
happiness (the former consisting in satisfaction
with one's person and moral behaviour, that
is, with what one does; the other in satisfaction
with that which nature confers, consequently
with what one enjoys as a foreign gift).
Without at present censuring the misuse of
the word (which even involves a contradiction),
it must be observed that the feeling of the
former belongs solely to the preceding head,
namely, perfection. For he who is to feel
himself happy in the mere consciousness of
his uprightness already possesses that perfection
which in the previous section was defined
as that end which is also duty.
If happiness, then, is in question, which
it is to be my duty to promote as my end,
it must be the happiness of other men whose
(permitted) end I hereby make also mine.
It still remains left to themselves to decide
what they shall reckon as belonging to their
happiness; only that it is in my power to
decline many things which they so reckon,
but which I do not so regard, supposing that
they have no right to demand it from me as
their own. A plausible objection often advanced
against the division of duties above adopted
consists in setting over against that end
a supposed obligation to study my own
(physical) happiness, and thus making this,
which is my natural and merely subjective
end, my duty (and objective end). This requires
to be cleared up.
Adversity, pain, and want are great temptations
to transgression of one's duty; accordingly
it would seem that strength, health, a competence,
and welfare generally, which are opposed
to that influence, may also be regarded as
ends that are also duties; that is, that
it is a duty to promote our own happiness
not merely to make that of others our end.
But in that case the end is not happiness
but the morality of the agent; and happiness
is only the means of removing the hindrances
to morality; permitted means, since no one
has a right to demand from me the sacrifice
of my not immoral ends. It is not directly
a duty to seek a competence for one's self;
but indirectly it may be so; namely, in order
to guard against poverty which is a great
temptation to vice. But then it is not my
happiness but my morality, to maintain which
in its integrity is at once my end and my
duty.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 55}
VI. Ethics does not supply Laws for Actions
(which is done by
Jurisprudence), but only for the Maxims of
Action
The notion of duty stands in immediate relation
to a law (even though I abstract from every
end which is the matter of the law); as is
shown by the formal principle of duty in
the categorical imperative: "Act so
that the maxims of thy action might become
a universal law." But in ethics this
is conceived as the law of thy own will,
not of will in general, which might be that
of others; for in the latter case it would
give rise to a judicial duty which does not
belong to the domain of ethics. In ethics,
maxims are regarded as those subjective laws
which merely have the specific character
of universal legislation, which is only a
negative principle (not to contradict a law
in general). How, then, can there be further
a law for the maxims of actions?
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 60}
It is the notion of an end which is also
a duty, a notion peculiar to ethics, that
alone is the foundation of a law for the
maxims of actions; by making the subjective
end (that which every one has) subordinate
to the objective end (that which every one
ought to make his own). The imperative: "Thou
shalt make this or that thy end (e. g., the
happiness of others)" applies to the
matter of the elective will (an object).
Now since no free action is possible, without
the agent having in view in it some end (as
matter of his elective will), it follows
that, if there is an end which is also a
duty, the maxims of actions which are means
to ends must contain only the condition of
fitness for a possible universal legislation:
on the other hand, the end which is also
a duty can make it a law that we should have
such a maxim, whilst for the maxim itself
the possibility of agreeing with a universal
legislation is sufficient.
For maxims of actions may be arbitrary, and
are only limited by the condition of fitness
for a universal legislation, which is the
formal principle of actions. But a law abolishes
the arbitrary character of actions, and is
by this distinguished from recommendation
(in which one only desires to know the best
means to an end).
VII. Ethical Duties are of indeterminate,
Juridical Duties of
strict, Obligation
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 65}
This proposition is a consequence of the
foregoing; for if the law can only command
the maxim of the actions, not the actions
themselves, this is a sign that it leaves
in the observance of it a latitude
(latitudo) for the elective will; that is,
it cannot definitely assign how and how much
we should do by the action towards the end
which is also duty. But by an indeterminate
duty is not meant a permission to make exceptions
from the maxim of the actions, but only the
permission to limit one maxim of duty by
another (e. g., the general love of our neighbour
by the love of parents); and this in fact
enlarges the field for the practice of virtue.
The more indeterminate the duty, and the
more imperfect accordingly the obligation
of the man to the action, and the closer
he nevertheless brings this maxim of obedience
thereto (in his own mind) to the strict duty
(of justice), so much the more perfect is
his virtuous action.
Hence it is only imperfect duties that are
duties of virtue. The fulfilment of them
is merit (meritum) = + a; but their transgression
is not necessarily demerit (demeritum) =
- a, but only moral unworth = o, unless the
agent made it a principle not to conform
to those duties. The strength of purpose
in the former case is alone properly called
virtue [Tugend] (virtus); the weakness in
the latter case is not vice (vitium), but
rather only lack of virtue [Untugend], a
want of moral strength (defectus moralis).
(As the word Tugend is derived from taugen
[to be good for something], Untugend by its
etymology signifies good for nothing.) Every
action contrary to duty is called transgression
(peccatum). Deliberate transgression which
has become a principle is what properly constitutes
what is called vice (vitium).
Although the conformity of actions to justice
(i. e., to be an upright man) is nothing
meritorious, yet the conformity of the maxim
of such actions regarded as duties, that
is, reverence for justice is meritorious.
For by this the man makes the right of humanity
or of men his own end, and thereby enlarges
his notion of duty beyond that of indebtedness
(officium debiti), since although another
man by virtue of his rights can demand that
my actions shall conform to the law, he cannot
demand that the law shall also contain the
spring of these actions. The same thing is
true of the general ethical command, "Act
dutifully from a sense of duty." To
fix this disposition firmly in one's mind
and to quicken it is, as in the former case,
meritorious, because it goes beyond the law
of duty in actions and makes the law in itself
the spring.
But just for or reason, those duties also
must be reckoned as of indeterminate obligation,
in respect of which there exists a subjective
principle which ethically rewards them; or
to bring them as near as possible to the
notion of a strict obligation, a principle
of susceptibility of this reward according
to the law of virtue; namely, a moral pleasure
which goes beyond mere satisfaction with
oneself (which may be merely negative), and
of which it is proudly said that in this
consciousness virtue is its own reward.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 70}
When this merit is a merit of the man in
respect of other men of promoting their natural
ends, which are recognized as such by all
men (making their happiness his own), we
might call it the sweet merit, the consciousness
of which creates a moral enjoyment in which
men are by sympathy inclined to revel; whereas
the bitter merit of promoting the true welfare
of other men, even though they should not
recognize it as such (in the case of the
unthankful and ungrateful), has commonly
no such reaction, but only produces a satisfaction
with one's self, although in the latter case
this would be even greater.
VIII. Exposition of the Duties of Virtue
as Intermediate Duties
(1) OUR OWN PERFECTION as an end which is
also a duty
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 75}
(a) Physical perfection; that is, cultivation
of all our faculties generally for the promotion
of the ends set before us by reason. That
this is a duty, and therefore an end in itself,
and that the effort to effect this even without
regard to the advantage that it secures us,
is based, not on a conditional (pragmatic),
but an unconditional (moral) imperative,
may be seen from the following consideration.
The power of proposing to ourselves an end
is the characteristic of humanity (as distinguished
from the brutes). With the end of humanity
in our own person is therefore combined the
rational will, and consequently the duty
of deserving well of humanity by culture
generally, by acquiring or advancing the
power to carry out all sorts of possible
ends, so far as this power is to be found
in man; that is, it is a duty to cultivate
the crude capacities of our nature, since
it is by that cultivation that the animal
is raised to man, therefore it is a duty
in itself.
This duty, however, is merely ethical, that
is, of indeterminate obligation. No principle
of reason prescribes how far one must go
in this effort (in enlarging or correcting
his faculty of understanding, that is, in
acquisition of knowledge or technical capacity);
and besides the difference in the circumstances
into which men may come makes the choice
of the kind of employment for which he should
cultivate his talent very arbitrary. Here,
therefore, there is no law of reason for
actions, but only for the maxim of actions,
viz.: "Cultivate thy faculties of mind
and body so as to be effective for all ends
that may come in thy way, uncertain which
of them may become thy own."
(b) Cultivation of Morality in ourselves.
The greatest moral perfection of man is to
do his duty, and that from duty (that the
law be not only the rule but also the spring
of his actions). Now at first sight this
seems to be a strict obligation, and as if
the principle of duty commanded not merely
the legality of every action, but also the
morality, i. e., the mental disposition,
with the exactness and strictness of a law;
but in fact the law commands even here only
the maxim of the action, namely, that we
should seek the ground of obligation, not
in the sensible impulses (advantage or disadvantage),
but wholly in the law; so that the action
itself is not commanded. For it is not possible
to man to see so far into the depth of his
own heart that he could ever be thoroughly
certain of the purity of his moral purpose
and the sincerity of his mind even in one
single action, although he has no doubt about
the legality of it. Nay, often the weakness
which deters a man from the risk of a crime
is regarded by him as virtue (which gives
the notion of strength). And how many there
are who may have led a long blameless life,
who are only fortunate in having escaped
so many temptations. How much of the element
of pure morality in their mental disposition
may have belonged to each deed remains hidden
even from themselves.
Accordingly, this duty to estimate the worth
of one's actions not merely by their legality,
but also by their morality (mental disposition),
is only of indeterminate obligation; the
law does not command this internal action
in the human mind itself, but only the maxim
of the action, namely, that we should strive
with all our power that for all dutiful actions
the thought of duty should be of itself an
adequate spring.
(2) HAPPINESS OF OTHERS as an end which is
also a duty
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 80}
(a) Physical Welfare. Benevolent wishes may
be unlimited, for they do not imply doing
anything. But the case is more difficult
with benevolent action, especially when this
is to be done, not from friendly inclination
(love) to others, but from duty, at the expense
of the sacrifice and mortification of many
of our appetites. That this beneficence is
a duty results from this: that since our
self-love cannot be separated from the need
to be loved by others (to obtain help from
them in case of necessity), we therefore
make ourselves an end for others; and this
maxim can never be obligatory except by having
the specific character of a universal law,
and consequently by means of a will that
we should also make others our ends. Hence
the happiness of others is an end that is
also a duty.
I am only bound then to sacrifice to others
a part of my welfare without hope of recompense:
because it is my duty, and it is impossible
to assign definite limits how far that may
go. Much depends on what would be the true
want of each according to his own feelings,
and it must be left to each to determine
this for himself. For that one should sacrifice
his own happiness, his true wants, in order
to promote that of others, would be a self-contradictory
maxim if made a universal law. This duty,
therefore, is only indeterminate; it has
a certain latitude within which one may do
more or less without our being able to assign
its limits definitely. The law holds only
for the maxims, not for definite actions.
(b) Moral well-being of others (salus moral
is) also belongs to the happiness of others,
which it is our duty to promote, but only
a negative duty. The pain that a man feels
from remorse of conscience, although its
origin is moral, is yet in its operation
physical, like grief, fear, and every other
diseased condition. To take care that he
should not be deservedly smitten by this
inward reproach is not indeed my duty but
his business; nevertheless, it is my duty
to do nothing which by the nature of man
might seduce him to that for which his conscience
may hereafter torment him, that is, it is
my duty not to give him occasion of stumbling.
But there are no definite limits within which
this care for the moral satisfaction of others
must be kept; therefore it involves only
an indeterminate obligation.
IX. What is a Duty of Virtue?
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 85}
Virtue is the strength of the man's maxim
in his obedience to duty. All strength is
known only by the obstacles that it can overcome;
and in the case of virtue the obstacles are
the natural inclinations which may come into
conflict with the moral purpose; and as it
is the man who himself puts these obstacles
in the way of his maxims, hence virtue is
not merely a self-constraint (for that might
be an effort of one inclination to constrain
another), but is also a constraint according
to a principle of inward freedom, and therefore
by the mere idea of duty, according to its
formal law.
All duties involve a notion of necessitation
by the law, and ethical duties involve a
necessitation for which only an internal
legislation is possible; juridical duties,
on the other hand, one for which external
legislation also is possible. Both, therefore,
include the notion of constraint, either
self-constraint or constraint by others.
The moral power of the former is virtue,
and the action springing from such a disposition
(from reverence for the law) may be called
a virtuous action (ethical), although the
law expresses a juridical duty. For it is
the doctrine of virtue that commands us to
regard the rights of men as holy.
But it does not follow that everything the
doing of which is virtue, is, properly speaking,
a duty of virtue. The former may concern
merely the form of the maxims; the latter
applies to the matter of them, namely, to
an end which is also conceived as duty. Now,
as the ethical obligation to ends, of which
there may be many, is only indeterminate,
because it contains only a law for the maxim
of actions, and the end is the matter (object)
of elective will; hence there are many duties,
differing according to the difference of
lawful ends, which may be called duties of
virtue (officia honestatis), just because
they are subject only to free self-constraint,
not to the constraint of other men, and determine
the end which is also a duty.
Virtue, being a coincidence of the rational
will, with every duty firmly settled in the
character, is, like everything formal, only
one and the same. But, as regards the end
of actions, which is also duty, that is,
as regards the matter which one ought to
make an end, there may be several virtues;
and as the obligation to its maxim is called
a duty of virtue, it follows that there are
also several duties of virtue.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 90}
The supreme principle of ethics (the doctrine
of virtue) is: "Act on a maxim, the
ends of which are such as it might be a universal
law for everyone to have." On this principle
a man is an end to himself as well as others,
and it is not enough that he is not permitted
to use either himself or others merely as
means (which would imply that be might be
indifferent to them), but it is in itself
a duty of every man to make mankind in general
his end.
The principle of ethics being a categorical
imperative does not admit of proof, but it
admits of a justification from principles
of pure practical reason. Whatever in relation
to mankind, to oneself, and others, can be
an end, that is an end for pure practical
reason: for this is a faculty of assigning
ends in general; and to be indifferent to
them, that is, to take no interest in them,
is a contradiction; since in that case it
would not determine the maxims of actions
(which always involve an end), and consequently
would cease to be practical reasons. Pure
reason, however, cannot command any ends
a priori, except so far as it declares the
same to be also a duty, which duty is then
cared a duty of virtue.
X. The Supreme Principle of Jurisprudence
was Analytical; that of
Ethics is Synthetical
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 95}
That external constraint, so far as it withstands
that which hinders the external freedom that
agrees with general laws (as an obstacle
of the obstacle thereto), can be consistent
with ends generally, is clear on the principle
of contradiction, and I need not go beyond
the notion of freedom in order to see it,
let the end which each may be what he will.
Accordingly, the supreme principle of jurisprudence
is an analytical principle. On the contrary
the principle of ethics goes beyond the notion
of external freedom and, by general laws,
connects further with it an end which it
makes a duty. This principle, therefore,
is synthetic. The possibility of it is contained
in the deduction (SS ix).
This enlargement of the notion of duty beyond
that of external freedom and of its limitation
by the merely formal condition of its constant
harmony; this, I say, in which, instead of
constraint from without, there is set up
freedom within, the power of self-constraint,
and that not by the help of other inclinations,
but by pure practical reason (which scorns
all such help), consists in this fact, which
raises it above juridical duty; that by it
ends are proposed from which jurisprudence
altogether abstracts. In the case of the
moral imperative, and the supposition of
freedom which it necessarily involves, the
law, the power (to fulfil it) and the rational
will that determines the maxim, constitute
all the elements that form the notion of
juridical duty. But in the imperative, which
commands the duty of virtue, there is added,
besides the notion of self- constraint, that
of an end; not one that we have, but that
we ought to have, which, therefore, pure
practical reason has in itself, whose highest,
unconditional end (which, however, continues
to be duty) consists in this: that virtue
is its own end and, by deserving well of
men, is also its own reward. Herein it shines
so brightly as an ideal to human perceptions,
it seems to cast in the shade even holiness
itself, which is never tempted to transgression.
* This, however, is an illusion arising from
the fact that as we have no measure for the
degree of strength, except the greatness
of the obstacles which might have been overcome
(which in our case are the inclinations),
we are led to mistake the subjective conditions
of estimation of a magnitude for the objective
conditions of the magnitude itself. But when
compared with human ends, all of which have
their obstacles to be overcome, it is true
that the worth of virtue itself, which is
its own end, far outweighs the worth of all
the utility and all the empirical ends and
advantages which it may have as consequences.
* So that one might very two well-known lines
of Haller thus:
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 100}
With all his failings, man is still
Better than angels void of will.
We may, indeed, say that man is obliged to
virtue (as a moral strength). For although
the power (facultas) to overcome all imposing
sensible impulses by virtue of his freedom
can and must be presupposed, yet this power
regarded as strength (robur) is something
that must be acquired by the moral spring
(the idea of the law) being elevated by contemplation
of the dignity of the pure law of reason
in us, and at the same time also by exercise.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 105}
XI. According to the preceding Principles,
the Scheme of Duties of
Virtue may be thus exhibited
The Material Element of the Duty of Virtue
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 110}
1 2
Internal Duty of Virtue External Virtue of
Duty
My Own End, The End of Others,
which is also my the promotion of
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 115}
Duty which is also my
Duty
(My own (The Happiness
Perfection) of Others)
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 120}
3 4
The Law which is The End which is
also Spring also Spring
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 125}
On which the On which the
Morality Legality
of every free determination of will rests
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 130}
The Formal Element of the Duty of Virtue.
XII. Preliminary Notions of the Susceptibility
of the Mind for
Notions of Duty generally
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 135}
These are such moral qualities as, when a
man does not possess them, he is not bound
to acquire them. They are: the moral feeling,
conscience, love of one's neighbour, and
respect for ourselves
(self-esteem). There is no obligation to
have these, since they are subjective conditions
of susceptibility for the notion of duty,
not objective conditions of morality. They
are all sensitive and antecedent, but natural
capacities of mind (praedispositio) to be
affected by notions of duty; capacities which
it cannot be regarded as a duty to have,
but which every man has, and by virtue of
which he can be brought under obligation.
The consciousness of them is not of empirical
origin, but can only follow on that of a
moral law, as an effect of the same on the
mind.
A. THE MORAL FEELING
This is the susceptibility for pleasure or
displeasure, merely from the consciousness
of the agreement or disagreement of our action
with the law of duty. Now, every determination
of the elective will proceeds from the idea
of the possible action through the feeling
of pleasure or displeasure in taking an interest
in it or its effect to the deed; and here
the sensitive state (the affection of the
internal sense) is either a pathological
or a moral feeling. The former is the feeling
that precedes the idea of the law, the latter
that which may follow it.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 140}
Now it cannot be a duty to have a moral feeling,
or to acquire it; for all consciousness of
obligation supposes this feeling in order
that one may become conscious of the necessitation
that lies in the notion of duty; but every
man (as a moral being) has it originally
in himself; the obligation, then, can only
extend to the cultivation of it and the strengthening
of it even by admiration of its inscrutable
origin; and this is effected by showing how
it is just, by the mere conception of reason,
that it is excited most strongly, in its
own purity and apart from every pathological
stimulus; and it is improper to call this
feeling a moral sense; for the word sense
generally means a theoretical power of perception
directed to an object; whereas the moral
feeling (like pleasure and displeasure in
general) is something merely subjective,
which supplies no knowledge. No man is wholly
destitute of moral feeling, for if he were
totally unsusceptible of this sensation he
would be morally dead; and, to speak in the
language of physicians, if the moral vital
force could no longer produce any effect
on this feeling, then his humanity would
be dissolved (as it were by chemical laws)
into mere animality and be irrevocably confounded
with the mass of other physical beings. But
we have no special sense for (moral) good
and evil any more than for truth, although
such expressions are often used; but we have
a susceptibility of the free elective will
for being moved by pure practical reason
and its law; and it is this that we call
the moral feeling.
B. OF CONSCIENCE
Similarly, conscience is not a thing to be
acquired, and it is not a duty to acquire
it; but every man, as a moral being, has
it originally within him. To be bound to
have a conscience would be as much as to
say to be under a duty to recognize duties.
For conscience is practical reason which,
in every case of law, holds before a man
his duty for acquittal or condemnation; consequently
it does not refer to an object, but only
to the subject (affecting the moral feeling
by its own act); so that it is an inevitable
fact, not an obligation and duty. When, therefore,
it is said, "This man has no conscience,"
what is meant is that he pays no heed to
its dictates. For if he really had none,
he would not take credit to himself for anything
done according to duty, nor reproach himself
with violation of duty, and therefore he
would be unable even to conceive the duty
of having a conscience.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 145}
I pass by the manifold subdivisions of conscience,
and only observe what follows from what has
just been said, namely, that there is no
such thing as an erring conscience. No doubt
it is possible sometimes to err in the objective
judgement whether something is a duty or
not; but I cannot err in the subjective whether
I have compared it with my practical (here
judicially acting) reason for the purpose
of that judgement: for if I erred I would
not have exercised practical judgement at
all, and in that case there is neither truth
nor error. Unconscientiousness is not want
of conscience, but the propensity not to
heed its judgement. But when a man is conscious
of having acted according to his conscience,
then, as far as regards guilt or innocence,
nothing more can be required of him, only
he is bound to enlighten his understanding
as to what is duty or not; but when it comes
or has come to action, then conscience speaks
involuntarily and inevitably. To act conscientiously
can, therefore, not be a duty, since otherwise
it would be necessary to have a second conscience,
in order to be conscious of the act of the
first.
The duty here is only to cultivate our con.
science, to quicken our attention to the
voice of the internal judge, and to use all
means to secure obedience to it, and is thus
our indirect duty.
C. OF LOVE TO MEN
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 150}
Love is a matter of feeling, not of will
or volition, and I cannot love because I
will to do so, still less because I ought
(I cannot be necessitated to love); hence
there is no such thing as a duty to love.
Benevolence, however (amor benevolentiae),
as a mode of action, may be subject to a
law of duty. Disinterested benevolence is
often called (though very improperly) love;
even where the happiness of the other is
not concerned, but the complete and free
surrender of all one's own ends to the ends
of another (even a superhuman) being, love
is spoken of as being also our duty. But
all duty is necessitation or constraint,
although it may be self-constraint according
to a law. But what is done from constraint
is not done from love.
It is a duty to do good to other men according
to our power, whether we love them or not,
and this duty loses nothing of its weight,
although we must make the sad remark that
our species, alas! is not such as to be found
particularly worthy of love when we know
it more closely. Hatred of men, however,
is always hateful: even though without any
active hostility it consists only in complete
aversion from mankind (the solitary misanthropy).
For benevolence still remains a duty even
towards the manhater, whom one cannot love,
but to whom we can show kindness.
To hate vice in men is neither duty nor against
duty, but a mere feeling of horror of vice,
the will having no influence on the feeling
nor the feeling on the will. Beneficence
is a duty. He who often practises this, and
sees his beneficent purpose succeed, comes
at last really to love him whom he has benefited.
When, therefore, it is said: "Thou shalt
love thy neighbour as thyself," this
does not mean, "Thou shalt first of
all love, and by means of this love (in the
next place) do him good"; but: "Do
good to thy neighbour, and this beneficence
will produce in thee the love of men (as
a settled habit of inclination to beneficence)."
The love of complacency (amor complacentiae,)
would therefore alone be direct. This is
a pleasure immediately connected with the
idea of the existence of an object, and to
have a duty to this, that is, to be necessitated
to find pleasure in a thing, is a contradiction.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 155}
D. OF RESPECT
Respect (reverentia) is likewise something
merely subjective; a feeling of a peculiar
kind not a judgement about an object which
it would be a duty to effect or to advance.
For if considered as duty it could only be
conceived as such by means of the respect
which we have for it. To have a duty to this,
therefore, would be as much as to say to
be bound in duty to have a duty. When, therefore,
it is said: "Man has a duty of self-esteem,"
this is improperly stated, and we ought rather
to say: "The law within him inevitably
forces from him respect for his own being,
and this feeling (which is of a peculiar
kind) is a basis of certain duties, that
is, of certain actions which may be consistent
with his duty to himself." But we cannot
say that he has a duty of respect for himself;
for he must have respect for the law within
himself, in order to be able to conceive
duty at all.
XIII. General Principles of the Metaphysics
of Morals in the
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 160}
treatment of Pure Ethics
First. A duty can have only a single ground
of obligation; and if two or more proof of
it are adduced, this is a certain mark that
either no valid proof has yet been given,
or that there are several distinct duties
which have been regarded as one.
For all moral proofs, being philosophical,
can only be drawn by means of rational knowledge
from concepts, not like mathematics, through
the construction of concepts. The latter
science admits a variety of proofs of one
and the same theorem; because in intuition
a priori there may be several properties
of an object, all of which lead back to the
very same principle. If, for instance, to
prove the duty of veracity, an argument is
drawn first from the harm that a lie causes
to other men; another from the worthlessness
of a liar and the violation of his own self-respect,
what is proved in the former argument is
a duty of benevolence, not of veracity, that
is to say, not the duty which required to
be proved, but a different one. Now, if,
in giving a variety of proof for one and
the same theorem, we flatter ourselves that
the multitude of reasons will compensate
the lack of weight in each taken separately,
this is a very unphilosophical resource,
since it betrays trickery and dishonesty;
for several insufficient proofs placed beside
one another do not produce certainty, nor
even probability. They should advance as
reason and consequence in a series, up to
the sufficient reason, and it is only in
this way that they can have the force of
proof. Yet the former is the usual device
of the rhetorician.
Secondly. The difference between virtue and
vice cannot be sought in the degree in which
certain maxims are followed, but only in
the specific quality of the maxims (their
relation to the law). In other words, the
vaunted principle of Aristotle, that virtue
is the mean between two vices, is false.
* For instance, suppose that good management
is given as the mean between two vices, prodigality
and avarice; then its origin as a virtue
can neither be defined as the gradual diminution
of the former vice (by saving), nor as the
increase of the expenses of the miserly.
These vices, in fact, cannot be viewed as
if they, proceeding as it were in opposite
directions, met together in good management;
but each of them has its own maxim, which
necessarily contradicts that of the other.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 165}
* The common classical formulae of ethics-
medio tutissimus ibis; omne mimium vertitur
in vitium; est modus in rebus, etc., medium
tenuere beati; virtus est medium vitiorum
et utrinque reductum- ["You will go
most safely in the middle" (Virgil);
"Every excess develops into a vice";
"There is a mean in all things, etc."
(Horace); "Happy they who steadily pursue
a middle course"; "Virtue is the
mean between two vices and equally removed
from either" (Horace).]- contain a poor
sort of wisdom, which has no definite principles;
for this mean between two extremes, who will
assign it for me? Avarice (as a vice) is
not distinguished from frugality (as a virtue)
by merely being the lat pushed too far; but
has a quite different principle;
(maxim), namely placing the end of economy
not in the enjoyment of one's means, but
in the mere possession of them, renouncing
enjoyment; just as the vice of prodigality
is not to be sought in the excessive enjoyment
of one's means, but in the bad maxim which
makes the use of them, without regard to
their maintenance, the sole end.
For the same reason, no vice can be defined
as an excess in the practice of certain actions
beyond what is proper (e. g., Prodigalitas
est excessus in consumendis opibus); or,
as a less exercise of them than is fitting
(Avaritia est defectus, etc.). For since
in this way the degree is left quite undefined,
and the question whether conduct accords
with duty or not, turns wholly on this, such
an account is of no use as a definition.
Thirdly. Ethical virtue must not be estimated
by the power we attribute to man of fulfilling
the law; but, conversely, the moral power
must be estimated by the law, which commands
categorically; not, therefore, by the empirical
knowledge that we have of men as they are,
but by the rational knowledge how, according
to the ideas of humanity, they ought to be.
These three maxims of the scientific treatment
of ethics are opposed to the older apophthegms:
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 170}
1. There is only one virtue and only one
vice.
2. Virtue is the observance of the mean path
between two opposite vices.
3. Virtue (like prudence) must be learned
from experience.
XIV. Of Virtue in General
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 175}
Virtue signifies a moral strength of will.
But this does not exhaust the notion; for
such strength might also belong to a holy
(superhuman) being, in whom no opposing impulse
counteracts the law of his rational will;
who therefore willingly does everything in
accordance with the law. Virtue then is the
moral strength of a man's will in his obedience
to duty; and this is a moral necessitation
by his own law giving reason, inasmuch as
this constitutes itself a power executing
the law. It is not itself a duty, nor is
it a duty to possess it
(otherwise we should be in duty bound to
have a duty), but it commands, and accompanies
its command with a moral constraint (one
possible by laws of internal freedom). But
since this should be irresistible, strength
is requisite, and the degree of this strength
can be estimated only by the magnitude of
the hindrances which man creates for himself,
by his inclinations. Vices, the brood of
unlawful dispositions, are the monsters that
he has to combat; wherefore this moral strength
as fortitude (fortitudo moral is) constitutes
the greatest and only true martial glory
of man; it is also called the true wisdom,
namely, the practical, because it makes the
ultimate end of the existence of man on earth
its own end. Its possession alone makes man
free, healthy, rich, a king, etc., nor either
chance or fate deprive him of this, since
he possesses himself, and the virtuous cannot
lose his virtue.
All the encomiums bestowed on the ideal of
humanity in its moral perfection can lose
nothing of their practical reality by the
examples of what men now are, have been,
or will probably be hereafter; anthropology
which proceeds from mere empirical knowledge
cannot impair anthroponomy which is erected
by the unconditionally legislating reason;
and although virtue may now and then be called
meritorious (in relation to men, not to the
law), and be worthy of reward, yet in itself,
as it is its own end, so also it must be
regarded as its own reward.
Virtue considered in its complete perfection
is, therefore, regarded not as if man possessed
virtue, but as if virtue possessed the man,
since in the former case it would appear
as though he had still had the choice (for
which he would then require another virtue,
in order to select virtue from all other
wares offered to him). To conceive a plurality
of virtues (as we unavoidably must) is nothing
else but to conceive various moral objects
to which the (rational) will is led by the
single principle of virtue; and it is the
same with the opposite vices. The expression
which personifies both is a contrivance for
affecting the sensibility, pointing, however,
to a moral sense. Hence it follows that an
aesthetic of morals is not a part, but a
subjective exposition of the Metaphysic of
Morals; in which the emotions that accompany
the force of the moral law make the that
force to be felt; for example: disgust, horror,
etc., which gives a sensible moral aversion
in order to gain the precedence from the
merely sensible incitement.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 180}
XV. Of the Principle on which Ethics is separated
from
Jurisprudence
This separation on which the subdivision
of moral philosophy in general rests, is
founded on this: that the notion of freedom,
which is common to both, makes it necessary
to divide duties into those of external and
those of internal freedom; the latter of
which alone are ethical. Hence this internal
freedom which is the condition of all ethical
duty must be discussed as a preliminary (discursus
praeliminaris), just as above the doctrine
of conscience was discussed as the condition
of all duty.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 185}
REMARKS
Of the Doctrine of Virtue on the Principle
Of Internal Freedom.
Habit (habitus) is a facility of action and
a subjective perfection of the elective will.
But not every such facility is a free habit
(habitus libertatis); for if it is custom
(assuetudo), that is, a uniformity of action
which, by frequent repetition, has become
a necessity, then it is not a habit proceeding
from freedom, and therefore not a moral habit.
Virtue therefore cannot be defined as a habit
of free law-abiding actions, unless indeed
we add "determining itself in its action
by the idea of the law"; and then this
habit is not a property of the elective will,
but of the rational will, which is a faculty
that in adopting a rule also declares it
to be a universal law, and it is only such
a habit that can be reckoned as virtue. Two
things are required for internal freedom:
to be master of oneself in a given case (animus
sui compos) and to have command over oneself
(imperium in semetipsum), that is to subdue
his emotions and to govern his passions.
With these conditions, the character (indoles)
is noble (erecta); in the opposite case,
it is ignoble (indoles abjecta serva).
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 190}
XVI. Virtue requires, first of all, Command
over Oneself
Emotions and passions are essentially distinct;
the former belong to feeling in so far as
this coming before reflection makes it more
difficult or even impossible. Hence emotion
is called hasty (animus praeceps). And reason
declares through the notion of virtue that
a man should collect himself; but this weakness
in the life of one's understanding, joined
with the strength of a mental excitement,
is only a lack of virtue (Untugend), and
as it were a weak and childish thing, which
may very well consist with the best will,
and has further this one good thing in it,
that this storm soon subsides. A propensity
to emotion (e. g., resentment) is therefore
not so closely related to vice as passion
is. Passion, on the other hand, is the sensible
appetite grown into a permanent inclination
(e. g., hatred in contrast to resentment).
The calmness with which one indulges it leaves
room for reflection and allows the mind to
frame principles thereon for itself; and
thus when the inclination falls upon what
contradicts the law, to brood on it, to allow
it to root itself deeply, and thereby to
take up evil (as of set purpose) into one's
maxim; and this is then specifically evil,
that is, it is a true vice.
Virtue, therefore, in so far as it is based
on internal freedom, contains a positive
command for man, namely, that he should bring
all his powers and inclinations under his
rule (that of reason); and this is a positive
precept of command over himself which is
additional to the prohibition, namely, that
he should not allow himself to be governed
by his feelings and inclinations (the duty
of apathy); since, unless reason takes the
reins of government into its own hands, the
feelings and inclinations play the master
over the man.
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 195}
XVII. Virtue necessarily presupposes Apathy
(considered as
Strength)
This word (apathy) has come into bad repute,
just as if it meant want of feeling, and
therefore subjective indifference with respect
to the objects of the elective will; it is
supposed to be a weakness. This misconception
may be avoided by giving the name moral apathy
to that want of emotion which is to be distinguished
from indifference. In the former, the feelings
arising from sensible impressions lose their
influence on the moral feeling only because
the respect for the law is more powerful
than all of them together. It is only the
apparent strength of a fever patient that
makes even the lively sympathy with good
rise to an emotion, or rather degenerate
into it. Such an emotion is called enthusiasm,
and it is with reference to this that we
are to explain the moderation which is usually
recommended in virtuous practices:
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 200}
Insani sapiens nomen ferat, aequus uniqui
Ultra quam satis est virtutem si petat ipsam.
*
* Horace. ["Let the wise man bear the
name of fool, and the just of unjust, if
he pursue virtue herself beyond the proper
bounds."]
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 205}
For otherwise it is absurd to imagine that
one could be too wise or too virtuous. The
emotion always belongs to the sensibility,
no matter by what sort of object it may be
excited. The true strength of virtue is the
mind at rest, with a firm, deliberate resolution
to bring its law into practice. That is the
state of health in the moral life; on the
contrary, the emotion, even when it is excited
by the idea of the good, is a momentary glitter
which leaves exhaustion after it. We may
apply the term fantastically virtuous to
the man who will admit nothing to be indifferent
in respect of morality
(adiaphora), and who strews all his steps
with duties, as with traps, and will not
allow it to be indifferent whether a man
eats fish or flesh, drink beer or wine, when
both agree with him; a micrology which, if
adopted into the doctrine of virtue, would
make its rule a tyranny.
REMARK
{INTRODUCTION ^paragraph 210}
Virtue is always in progress, and yet always
begins from the beginning. The former follows
from the fact that, objectively considered,
it is an ideal and unattainable, and yet
it is a duty constantly to approximate to
it. The second is founded subjectively on
the nature of man which is affected by inclinations,
under the influence of which virtue, with
its maxims adopted once for all, can never
settle in a position of rest; but, if it
is not rising, inevitably falls; because
moral maxims cannot, like technical, be based
on custom (for this belongs to the physical
character of the determination of will);
but even if the practice of them become a
custom, the agent would thereby lose the
freedom in the choice of his maxims, which
freedom is the character of an action done
from duty.
ON_CONSCIENCE
ON CONSCIENCE
The consciousness of an internal tribunal
in man (before which "his thoughts accuse
or excuse one another") is CONSCIENCE.
Every man has a conscience, and finds himself
observed by an inward judge which threatens
and keeps him in awe (reverence combined
with fear); and this power which watches
over the laws within him is not something
which he himself (arbitrarily) makes, but
it is incorporated in his being. It follows
him like his shadow, when he thinks to escape.
He may indeed stupefy himself with pleasures
and distractions, but cannot avoid now and
then coming to himself or awaking, and then
he at once perceives its awful voice. In
his utmost depravity, he may, indeed, pay
no attention to it, but he cannot avoid hearing
it.
Now this original intellectual and (as a
conception of duty) moral capacity, called
conscience, has this peculiarity in it, that
although its business is a business of man
with himself, yet he finds himself compelled
by his reason to transact it as if at the
command of another person. For the transaction
here is the conduct of a trial (causa) before
a tribunal. But that he who is accused by
his conscience should be conceived as one
and the same person with the judge is an
absurd conception of a judicial court; for
then the complainant would always lose his
case. Therefore, in all duties the conscience
of the man must regard another than himself
as the judge of his actions, if it is to
avoid self-contradiction. Now this other
may be an actual or a merely ideal person
which reason frames to itself. Such an idealized
person (the authorized judge of conscience)
must be one who knows the heart; for the
tribunal is set up in the inward part of
man; at the same time he must also be all-obliging,
that is, must be or be conceived as a person
in respect of whom all duties are to be regarded
as his commands; since conscience is the
inward judge of all free actions. Now, since
such a moral being must at the same time
possess all power (in heaven and earth),
since otherwise he could not give his commands
their proper effect (which the office of
judge necessarily requires), and since such
a moral being possessing power over all is
called GOD, hence conscience must be conceived
as the subjective principle of a responsibility
for one's deeds before God; nay, this latter
concept is contained (though it be only obscurely)
in every moral self-consciousness.
THE END
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