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3 - Justice without virtue

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 January 2011

Lara Denis
Affiliation:
Agnes Scott College, Decatur
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

An Aristotelian friend recently proposed to me an interpretation of the Doctrine of Right according to which Kant is best read as distinguishing between “acting justly” and “being just.” On that distinction, it is possible for a person to act justly without, in so acting, being just. Alternatively, in acting justly a person may simultaneously be just. The first person acts justly without making it her maxim so to act; the second person makes acting justly her maxim. This Aristotelian reading finds support in Kant's characterization of duties of justice as “indirect” ethical duties (MS 6:219): all juridical duties are at the same time indirect ethical duties in that we should make it our maxim to act from juridical duties rather than merely in accordance with them. The reading does not deny that acting in mere outward conformity with justice is in some sense sufficient for the fulfillment of our juridical duties; however, the claim is that the person who also makes it her maxim to act from those duties is more fully just. It is an intuitively attractive reading: we do not want persons to act in mere outward conformity with justice – we want them to “internalize” the demands of justice, to act justly from inner conviction. Many believe that this must be Kant's position, given his apparent claim in the Groundwork that our capacity for self-legislation constitutes the ground of morality in general.

Type
Chapter
Information
Kant's Metaphysics of Morals
A Critical Guide
, pp. 51 - 70
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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References

Timmons, Mark (ed.), The Metaphysics of Morals: Interpretative Essays (Oxford University Press, 2002)

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