Kant defined 'Right' (Recht) as the condition that obtains among a population of physically embodied persons capable of setting their own ends who live on a finite surface and therefore cannot avoid interaction with each other if each is as free to set their own ends as is consistent with the freedom of all to do the same. He regarded this rational idea, heir to the traditional idea of 'natural Right, as the test of the legitimacy of the laws of any actual state, or 'positive Right.' He clearly considered Right to be part of morality as a whole, namely the coercively enforceable part, as contrasted to Ethics, which is the non-coercively enforceable part of morality. Some have questioned whether Right is part of morality, but this Element shows how Kant's ""Universal Principle of Right"" follows straightforwardly from the foundational idea of Kant's moral philosophy as a whole.
By:
Paul Guyer (Brown University) Imprint: Cambridge University Press Country of Publication: United Kingdom ISBN:9781009464468 ISBN 10: 1009464469 Series:Elements in the Philosophy of Immanuel Kant Pages: 72 Publication Date:16 January 2025 Audience:
General/trade
,
ELT Advanced
Format:Hardback Publisher's Status: Active
1. Is Kant's doctrine of right part of his moral philosophy?; 2. Kant's definitions of right; 3. Freedom, morality, and right: Kant's core argument; 4. Political morality; Abbreviations; Bibliography.