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Understanding Moral Obligation
Kant, Hegel, Kierkegaard

Analyses the accounts of moral obligation offered by Kant, Hegel and Kierkegaard, thereby challenging current histories of modern ethics.

Robert Stern (Author)

9781107434400, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 7 August 2014

292 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.5 cm, 0.4 kg

'In his thoroughly researched and tightly argued new book, Robert Stern proposes that the 'standard story' of Kant as an ethical constructivist - in particular, the idea that Kant rejected value realism as a threat to autonomy - is seriously misleading … Stern's book is a model of how systematic philosophy can be fruitfully pursued in dialogue with historical sources without doing violence to the historical particularity of those sources.' Philosophy in Review

In many histories of modern ethics, Kant is supposed to have ushered in an anti-realist or constructivist turn by holding that unless we ourselves 'author' or lay down moral norms and values for ourselves, our autonomy as agents will be threatened. In this book, Robert Stern challenges the cogency of this 'argument from autonomy', and claims that Kant never subscribed to it. Rather, it is not value realism but the apparent obligatoriness of morality that really poses a challenge to our autonomy: how can this be accounted for without taking away our freedom? The debate the book focuses on therefore concerns whether this obligatoriness should be located in ourselves (Kant), in others (Hegel) or in God (Kierkegaard). Stern traces the historical dialectic that drove the development of these respective theories, and clearly and sympathetically considers their merits and disadvantages; he concludes by arguing that the choice between them remains open.

Acknowledgements
References and abbreviations
Introduction
Part I. Kant: 1. Kant, moral realism, and the argument from autonomy
2. The argument from autonomy and the problem of moral obligation
3. Kant's solution to the problem of moral obligation
Part II. Hegel: 4. Hegel's critique of Kant (via Schiller)
5. Hegel's solution to the problem of moral obligation
Part III. Kierkegaard: 6. Kierkegaard's critique of Hegel
7. Kierkegaard's solution to the problem of moral obligation
Conclusion: from Kant to Kierkegaard - and back again?
Bibliography.

Subject Areas: Psychological theory & schools of thought [JMA], Ethics & moral philosophy [HPQ], Philosophy of mind [HPM], History of Western philosophy [HPC]

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