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Immanuel Kant | Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysics of Morals
In this excerpt from Kant's moral philosophy, we are first introduced to the concepts of good will, duty, and moral worth, followed by a discussion leading up to the fundamental principle of the categorical imperative. The passage concludes with Kant's examples demonstrating the distinction between perfect and imperfect duties.
-The type of love that is ___________ follows from principles of action rather than from inclinations of the senses.
P-value
A statistical measure indicating the probability of obtaining the observed results, or more extreme results, assuming the null hypothesis is true.
Rejection Region
The range of values in a statistical test for which the null hypothesis is rejected if the test statistic falls within this region.
Critical Value
A point on a statistical distribution representing a threshold at which the null hypothesis is either rejected or not rejected.
One-Tailed Test
A statistical test in which the region of rejection is on only one side of the sampling distribution, used when the research hypothesis is directional.
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