Kantian Ethics - Key Words Flashcards
Autonomy
Belief that we are self-directed beings, the centre of our own worlds, making our own free choices
A priori
Knowledge which is not dependant on sense experience
Heteronomy
For Kant, the state of being directed by others in our decision-making
Free will
The belief that we are able to make our own uncompelled choices in life
Deontological Ethics
Any ethical system which ignores outcomes, concentrating just on whether the act is good in itself
Hypothetical Imperative
What we must do to achieve a particular goal, there is no requirement to follow this, but it is how we should act if we wish to achieve something, the character of ‘…if … then…”
Categorical Imperative
That which our reason teaches us always must be done, there are three forms of the imperative
First form of the Categorical Imperative
Act only on that maxim that you can will to be universal law
Second form of the Categorical Imperative
So act as to treat persons always as ends and never as means only
Third form of the Categorical Imperative
So act as to treat everyone, including yourself, as an end in the kingdom of ends