Kant’s Duty to Make Virtue Widely Loved

Kantian Review 27 (2):195-213 (2022)
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Abstract

This article examines an appendix to the Doctrine of Virtue which has received little attention. I argue that this passage suggests that Kant makes it a duty, internal to his system of duties, to ‘join the graces with virtue’ and so to ‘make virtue widely loved’ (MM, 6: 473). The duty to make virtue widely loved obligates us to bring the standards of respectability, and so the social graces, into a formal agreement with what morality demands of us, such that the social graces give the illusion of virtue. The existence of such a duty can answer Schiller’s persistent objection that Kant’s ethics scares away the Graces with Duty.

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Mike Gregory
University of Edinburgh

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References found in this work

Kantian ethics almost without apology.Marcia Baron - 1995 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
Community and Progress in Kant's Moral Philosophy.Kate A. Moran - 2012 - Catholic University of America Press.
Kant and the Culture of Enlightenment.Katerina Deligiorgi - 2005 - State University of New York Press.

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