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Return to Great Conversation 8e Student Resources
Chapter 20 Self-Quiz
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The aim of Kant's critique of reason is
to demonstrate that reason can only be passion's slave.
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to reveal the a priori conditions of knowledge.
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to show, contrary to Hume, that the scope of possible human knowledge is unlimited.
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to show, contrary to Descartes, that human knowledge is not possible.
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Synthetic a priori judgments, Kant tells us, are
knowable only in virtue of experience.
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true in virtue of the fact that their denials are contradictory.
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the only way of knowing things in themselves.
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a reflection of the structure of a rational mind.
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The illusions of speculative metaphysics
arise because of the very nature of reason itself.
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pertain particularly to the realm of phenomena.
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can be avoided by proving the existence of God.
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have nothing to do with the nature of the self.
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Concepts, according to Kant, are
faint copies of impressions.
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one and all a priori.
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like rules for operating on some given material.
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the only things guaranteeing knowledge of things in themselves.
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The function of the categories is to
construct an objective world.
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illustrate how subjective all our opinions and beliefs really are.
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serve as abstractions from sensible intuitions.
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help the dove to fly in empty space.
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According to Kant, knowledge of our own nature
is impossible in any sense.
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is restricted to the way we appear in the realm of phenomena.
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is made possible by the category of substance, the application of which to ourselves demonstrates that we are essentially souls, not bodies.
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includes knowledge that we are free.
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According to Kant, a good will is one that
wills according to the dictates of one's society.
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wills to do its duty.
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obeys only hypothetical imperatives.
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is heteronomous.
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The supreme principle of morality, Kant tells us,
depends on the will of God.
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is different for each rational individual, since we are all autonomous choosers of the morally good.
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is universally accepted.
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forbids applying rules to others we don't apply to ourselves.
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The categorical imperative
is true in the same way that "Bachelors are unmarried" is true.
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tells us that if we want to be happy, we should respect the rights of others.
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bids us universalize all synthetic a priori principles.
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forbids manipulation of others for our own purposes.
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Regarding freedom of the will, Kant says that
we have no good reason to believe in it.
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though all our actions, noumenally conceived, have causes, yet we may be phenomenally free.
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morality would not be possible without it.
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we are free whenever we are not hindered in doing something we want to do.
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I am autonomous in the realm of morality in the sense that
I am a legislator of the moral law for myself.
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my morality may not be the morality of others.
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what I want may not be what you want.
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I cannot be in error about what is right for me.
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