MORAL AND RELIGION IN KANT’S PHILOSOPHY

Authors

  • Diego Carlos Zanella (PUCRS) PUCRS

Abstract

ABSTRACT: Moral and religion are bound up in some way, becoming different just by the fact that while moral, the duties are enacted as fundamental principles of every thinking human being, and by the fact that this one must act as a member of an ends universal system; while religion, those duties are seen as commandments of a supreme holy will, so that, the moral laws are the only ones which are in accordance with the idea of a supreme perfection. The connection between moral and religion, besides being fundamental and structural information of pure reason, it is the progressive recognition of a universal plan in which, despite all the liberty abuses by men, will reach in the end the highest possible degree of perfection of humankind. Key words: Moral. Religion. Will. Kant.

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Author Biography

Diego Carlos Zanella (PUCRS), PUCRS

Aluno do doutorado em filosofia na PUCRS.

Published

2008-11-21

How to Cite

Zanella (PUCRS), D. C. (2008). MORAL AND RELIGION IN KANT’S PHILOSOPHY. Intuitio, 1(2), 89–105. Retrieved from https://revistaseletronicas.pucrs.br/index.php/intuitio/article/view/3998

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