Friday, 14 December 2018

KANT AND SCHOPENHAUER ON MORAL MOTIVATION - Dr. Emmanuel J. Udokang

KANT AND SCHOPENHAUER ON MORAL MOTIVATION - APCP, VOL.3, NO.1

KANT AND SCHOPENHAUER ON MORAL MOTIVATION
BY

Dr. Emmanuel J. Udokang
Department of Peace & Development Studies
 Salem University, Lokoja - Nigeria 

ABSTRACT

Perhaps the single most important characteristic approaches to moral education have been the emphasis on moral reasoning (Plato, Kant, Aquinas et cetera). While this emphasis is, I believe, a healthy one, there is some tendency to neglect the emotive side (motivational dynamics) and to suppose that merely verbalizing theoretically "higher level" moral reasons will correlate positively with moral behavior (Kohlberg, 39). My contentions in this paper are first, that moral growth involves a gradual development of moral understanding (where there is a highly contingent and often misleading correlate between "giving reasons" and operating on a certain level of moral understanding); secondly, that moral maturity involves the gradual acquisition of a number of feeling dispositions like a sense of justice and an abhorrence of the unnecessary suffering of any sentient creature; and finally, that there ought to be a kind of harmony or fit between moral understanding or reasoning on the one hand, and the feeling dispositions on the other hand. 


KEYWORDS: Immanuel Kant, Moral Motivation, Law, Reason


KANT AND SCHOPENHAUER ON MORAL MOTIVATION 

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