John Rawls and the New Kantian Moral Theory
Keywords: 
Moral Philosophy
Kant
John Rawls
Issue Date: 
2005
Publisher: 
Continuum
ISBN: 
0-8264-7843-3
0-8264-9987-2
978-0-8264-7843-6
978-0-8264-9987-5
Citation: 
González, A.M. (2005). ""John Rawls and the New Kantian Moral Theory"". En: Thom Brooks and Fabian Freyenhagen (ed.), The Legacy of John Rawls, (pp. 1-28). Continuum
Abstract
I argue that Rawls’ reading of Kant has been a major influence on the work of some contemporary Kantian scholars. Rawls’ influence on the new Kantian moral theory can be recognized in several points: a) the conception of philosophy as a “deeply practical project”, which leads to the adoption of a first-person approach to ethics; b) the reception of Kant’s philosophy within a pragmatic context, which leads to play down the metaphysical implications of Kant’s dualisms, in favor of an interpretation which seems plausible within a political culture given in advance c) a characteristic interpretation of Kant’s moral constructivism, which while stressing the primacy of the right over the good, tries to specify the ways in which the good plays a role in morals, thereby opening a way to show the relevance of the empirical in Kant’s ethics d) an approach to Kant’s practical reason which stresses the complementarities between the Hypothetical and the Categorical Imperative, interpreted in the light of Rawls’ distinction between the Rational and the Reasonable; e) the central role played by the concept of “rational nature” in the new Kantian moral theory, which may likewise be related to Rawls’ concern for clarifying the conception of the person behind his approach to practical reason.

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