Significance and System
Essays on Kant's Ethics
Mark Timmons
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements and Sources
Abbreviations for Kant's works
Introduction
Part I: Interpreting the Categorical Imperative
1. Necessitation and Justification in Kant's Ethics
2. Decision Procedures, Moral Criteria, and the Problem of Relevant Descriptions in Kant's Ethics
3. The Categorical Imperative and Universalizability
4. The Philosophical and Practical Significance of Kant's Universality Formulations of the Categorical Imperative
Part II: Motive, Rightness, and Virtue
5. Motive and Rightness in Kant's Ethical System
6. Kant's Grounding Project in the Doctrine of Virtue
7. The Perfect Duty to Oneself as an Animal Being
8. The Moral Significance of Gratitude in Kant's Ethics
Part III: The Psychology of Moral Evil
9. Love of Honor, Emulation, and the Devilish Vices in Kant's Ethics
10. The Good, the Bad, and the Badass: On the Descriptive Adequacy of Kant's Conception of Moral Evil
Index