Examlex
Christine Korsgaard: Skepticism About Practical Reason
Kant's ethical theory attempts to base morality on practical reason, but many thinkers have been skeptical about the extent to which human action is or could be directed by reason. Korsgaard distinguishes between content skepticism, which involves doubts about whether formal principles of rationality can provide any substantive moral guidance, and motivational skepticism, which involves doubts about the ability of reason to serve as a motive. Korsgaard argues that motivational skepticism is always based on content skepticism, and hence cannot provide an independent argument against a moral theory based on practical reason.
Korsgaard begins by discussing Hume's skeptical view of practical reason, according to which "reason is, and ought to be only the slave of the passions." On Hume's view, reason neither selects nor ranks our ends, but merely allows us to determine the most efficient means to our ends, which are themselves set by our desires. Practical irrationality occurs, on Hume's view, only when our desires are somehow based on false beliefs. Korsgaard argues, however, for the possibility of pure irrationality-cases in which we fail to respond appropriately to an available reason, as when one sees that one's ends can only be achieved by certain means, but fails to take those means. Despite the fact that reason and motivation can come apart, however, Korsgaard holds that the two are tightly linked. She endorses the internalist requirement, according to which one can only have a reason for action if that reason is capable of motivating a rational person. Because we sometimes fail to be rational, we can sometimes fail to be motivated by our reasons. But Korsgaard insists that human beings are capable of being rational, especially given the right sort of training. Accordingly, Korsgaard claims that if there are any unconditional requirements of reason (as Kant claimed) , then humans are capable of responding to them, even if they sometimes fail to do so. If so, motivational skepticism is correct only if content skepticism is correct. The former cannot float free from the latter.
-Korsgaard claims that motivational skepticism involves doubts about:
Financial Advantage
An economic benefit or superiority that a person or entity holds, giving them a better position in financial transactions or comparisons.
Fixed Expenses
Expenses that remain constant regardless of the volume of goods produced or sold within a specific time frame, like lease payments or wage bills.
Financial Advantage
A benefit gained in terms of financial health, growth, or savings that gives a business or individual a competitive edge.
Operating Results
The outcomes or the financial performance of a business's operations, often presented in the form of income statements displaying revenues, expenses, and net profits or losses.
Q2: According to Mackie, there is no objective
Q7: According to Wolf, a moral saint would
Q12: Mackie maintains that if there were objective
Q13: Gauthier claims that the content of a
Q14: Foot concludes that moral judgments have no
Q19: Passive euthanasia is:<br>A) the intentional termination of
Q19: What is the difference between a categorical
Q25: Nietzsche claims that asceticism shows that man
Q27: Prichard claims that virtue and morality are
Q29: The argument from relativity begins by pointing