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David Hume And Immanuel Kant

Decent Essays

David Hume and Immanuel Kant argue about the origin of something nearly everyone agrees on, our actions are a result of reason. Hume holds the idea that actions, when cut down to their core, are a result of the universal feelings that a species shares. Kant’s counterargument is that actions, when not done as a means to an end or faculty of desire, are done from duty and only such have true moral worth. He goes on to define good will with and without limitations, and separates the duties towards oneself and to others. Both arguments seem to be a bit incomplete to me, though I believe Hume to be more on the right track. David Hume does a better job arguing for the source of actions of moral worth than Kant because of his simpler approach and more easily applicable standard. The problem with Kant’s argument is that he tries to put too many layers onto it. He introduces the idea between “good with limitations” and “good without limitations.” It seems quite the stretch for an action to be good without limitation while not good because of its effect. When trying to define good will as the only thing good in and beyond the world, I feel as though Kant is approaching true moral worth as something done for universal utility. Physics taught us that actions always have reactions, so it’s difficult to find situations in which humans do something purely out of duty or volition. In his example of a philanthropist, he gives the impression that if the man felt good for donating even in

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