Kant’s account of evil makes three key claims with major consequences for moral agency and responsibility. First, the distinction between good and evil lies in the will (R 6:59). Unlike prior theories that locate evil in natural inclinations or external circumstances, Kant situates evil in the will’s choice of maxims. This reveals that earlier theories […] The post Kant’s Empowering Conception of Humanity first appeared on Blog of the APA.| Blog of the APA
Naar Marokko, met de trein. Laten we zeggen: het is mogelijk. Ik heb deze reis onlangs afgelegd. Dag 1: Marrakesh-Tanger. Dag 2: de boot naar…| Bij Nader Inzien
Recently, I wrote a review (2025) of Brian Talbot’s The End of Epistemology as We Know It. As I hope the review suggests, there was much to admire in that monograph. The book made me wonder about the…| Social Epistemology Review and Reply Collective
Steve Fuller’s most recent book is entitled To Judge and to Justify, with the subtitle Profiles of the Academic Vocation, but this hardly offers the best key to its contents. The book might rather be…| Social Epistemology Review and Reply Collective