212642

Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke

2012

440 Pages

ISBN 978-1-349-32848-2

Kant, Schopenhauer and morality

recovering the categorical imperative

Mark Thomas Walker

Addressing the perennial question: why should we be moral? this book argues that we can only give a truly and morally satisfying answer to that question by radically reconfiguring our conception of the self and the way it relates to others.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/9780230356955

Full citation:

Walker, M.T. (2012). Kant, Schopenhauer and morality: recovering the categorical imperative, Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Walker Mark Thomas

1-13

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Justifying morality

Walker Mark Thomas

17-51

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Groundwork iii

Walker Mark Thomas

52-75

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The second critique

Walker Mark Thomas

76-105

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Rational nature as an end in itself?

Walker Mark Thomas

106-127

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From rational agency to freedom

Walker Mark Thomas

133-187

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From freedom to the non-phenomenal

Walker Mark Thomas

188-234

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From non-phenomenality to universality

Walker Mark Thomas

235-282

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The identity of persons

Walker Mark Thomas

283-335

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Recovering the categorical imperative

Walker Mark Thomas

336-387

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