Käytännöllisen Järjen Kritiikki by Immanuel Kant

The work develops a moral philosophy holding that practical reason alone grounds the binding moral law: agents must act from duty in accordance with the categorical imperative, treating maxims as if they were universal laws. It defends human autonomy and freedom as necessary presuppositions of morality and introduces the postulates of practical reason—freedom, immortality, and God—as required to reconcile virtue with the highest good, while distinguishing practical from theoretical reason by arguing that moral, not speculative, concern justifies these postulates.

Published
1788
Nationality
German
Length
Unknown
Pages
Unknown
Original Language
German
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Alternate Titles
- Critique of Practical Reason
- Kritik der praktischen Vernunft
- Käytännöllisen järjen kritiikki
- The Critique of Practical Reason

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