
Sovereign Reason
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Content
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Contents
- 1 Introduction: Reason and its Discontents
- 1.1 Reason in Reflective Common Sense: Abilities, Motives, and Principles of Reason
- 1.1.1 Abilities of Reason
- 1.1.2 Motives of Reason
- 1.1.3 Principles of Reason
- 1.2 Theories of Reason: Humean, Formalist, Kantian, and Rationalist
- 1.2.1 Humean Theories of Reason
- 1.2.2 Formalist Theories of Reason
- 1.2.3 Kantian Theories of Reason
- 1.2.4 Rationalist Theories of Reason
- 1.3 Reason in Theory and Practice: The Content Criterion
- 1.3.1 Refine Common Sense
- 1.3.2 Develop Theories of Reason
- 1.3.3 Assess Theories of Reason by Reflective Common Sense
- 1.4 Methods: Reflective Common Sense and Kant
- 1.4.1 Common Sense and Kant
- 1.4.2 The Kantian Tradition
- 1.5 Aims
- 1.5.1 Abilities of Reason
- 1.5.2 Motives of Reason
- 1.5.3 Principles of Reason
- 1.5.4 Kant
- 1.6 Limits
- 1.7 The Sovereignty Conception of Reason
- 1.7.1 Abilities of Reason
- 1.7.2 Motives of Reason
- 1.7.3 Principles of Reason
- 1.8 Structure
- 1.9 Final Remarks: Further Issues about my Approach to Kant
- PART I BASIC FEATURES OF THE SOVEREIGNTY CONCEPTION OF REASON
- 2 Introduction to Part I
- 2.1 Four Questions: Subjects, Abilities, Motives, and Requirements of Autonomy
- 2.2 Sovereign Reason
- 2.3 Human Reason
- 2.4 Other Features of the Power of Reason
- 3 Scope of Rational Self-Governance
- 3.1 Powers of Mind: Abilities and Principles
- 3.2 A Partial Model of Human Powers of Mind: Sense, Imagination, Understanding, Judgment, Attention, Signification, Choice, Feeling, and Desire
- 3.2.1 Sense
- 3.2.2 Imagination
- 3.2.3 Understanding
- 3.2.4 Judgment
- 3.2.5 Attention
- 3.2.6 Signification
- 3.2.7 Choice
- 3.2.8 Feeling
- 3.2.9 Desire
- 3.3 Some Connections among Human Powers of Mind
- 3.4 Final Remarks
- 4 Governing Abilities of Reason
- 4.1 Sovereignty: Governing Abilities
- 4.2 Legislative Abilities: Formulate, Issue, and Connect Incentives with Laws
- 4.2.1 Formulate Laws
- 4.2.2 Issue Laws
- 4.2.3 Connect Incentives with Laws
- 4.2.4 Illustrations of our Legislative Powers of Reason
- 4.2.4.1 Legislating a Moral Law of Reason
- 4.2.4.2 Legislating a Prudential Law of Reason
- 4.2.4.3 Legislating a Theoretical Law of Reason
- 4.3 Executive Abilities: Interpret, Apply, Enforce, and Police Laws
- 4.3.1 Interpret and Apply Laws
- 4.3.2 Enforce Laws
- 4.3.3 Police Laws
- 4.3.4 Illustrations of our Executive Powers of Reason
- 4.3.4.1 Executing a Moral Law of Reason
- 4.3.4.2 Executing a Prudential Law of Reason
- 4.3.4.3 Executing a Theoretical Law of Reason
- 4.4 Judicial Abilities: Establish Courts, Attribute and Impute Acts, Apply Laws, and Assign Consequences
- 4.4.1 Establish Courts
- 4.4.2 Attribute and Impute Acts
- 4.4.3 Apply Laws to Cases
- 4.4.4 Assign Consequences
- 4.4.5 Illustrations of our Judicial Powers of Reason
- 4.4.5.1 Adjudicating a Moral Law of Reason
- 4.4.5.2 Adjudicating a Prudential Law of Reason
- 4.4.5.3 Adjudicating a Theoretical Law of Reason
- 4.5 Final Remarks
- 5 Interests of Reason
- 5.1 Interests: Desires, Emotions, Feelings, Ends, and all Other Motives
- 5.2 Interests of a Mental Power: Interests that Arise from or are Part of a Power of Mind
- 5.2.1 Interests that Arise from a Mental Power
- 5.2.2 Interests that are Part of a Mental Power
- 5.3 Interests of Reason: Interests that Arise From or Are Part of the Power of Reason
- 5.3.1 Interests that Arise from the Power of Reason
- 5.3.2 Interests that are Part of the Power of Reason
- 5.3.3 Rational Interests and Interests of Reason
- 5.4 Formal Interests of Reason: Interests in Governing Ourselves by Reason
- 5.5 Substantive Interests of Reason: Interests in Things Apart From Governing Ourselves by Reason
- 5.6 Final Remarks: Kant on Substantive Interests of Reason
- 6 Laws of Reason
- 6.1 The Autonomy Restriction: Laws of Reason Must Be Based Only in the Power of Reason
- 6.2 Laws of Reason: Principles that Are Constitutive of the Power of Reason
- 6.3 Formal Laws of Reason: Laws that Concern Consistency and Coherence within a Person
- 6.4 Substantive Laws of Reason: Laws that Do Not Only Concern Consistency and Coherence within a Person
- 6.5 The Abstract Principle of Justifiability: Generalizing the Categorical Imperative
- 6.6 An Interpretive Schema: The Sovereignty Conception of Reason's Partial Principle of Justifiability
- 6.6.1 Nature, Grounds, and Relation to Other Principles
- 6.6.2 Logical Form
- 6.6.3 Domain
- 6.6.4 Normative Status
- 6.6.5 Connection Between Normative Status and Justifiability
- 6.6.6 Object of Justifiability
- 6.6.7 Scope of Justifiability
- 6.6.8 Modality of Justifiability
- 6.6.9 Responses Required for Justifiability
- 6.6.10 Factors that Influence Responses
- 6.6.11 Criteria of Justifiability
- 6.7 Final Remarks
- 7 The Sovereignty of Reason
- 7.1 Autonomy: Governing All of our Mental Powers
- 7.2 Autonomy: Governing Ourselves by All Laws of Reason
- 7.3 Autonomy: Governing Ourselves through Interests of Reason
- 7.4 Comparisons: O'Neill, Hill, and Rawls
- 7.4.1 Onora O'Neill
- 7.4.2 Thomas E. Hill, Jr.
- 7.4.3 John Rawls
- 7.5 Final Remarks: Summary of the Sovereignty Conception of Reason
- PART II APPLICATIONS OF THE SOVEREIGNTY CONCEPTION OF REASON
- 8 Introduction to Part II
- 8.1 Substantive Interests of Reason: Illustrations, Methods, and Limits
- 8.1.1 The Interests of Reason We Will Explore
- 8.1.2 Methods
- 8.1.3 Limits
- 8.2 Laws of Reason and The Qualified Justifiability Argument: Illustrations, Methods, and Limits
- 8.2.1 The Qualified Justifiability Argument
- 8.2.2 Presumptive Laws of Reason
- 8.2.3 Methods
- 8.2.4 Limits
- 8.3 Final Remarks
- 9 Explanation, Unity, Specificity, Affinity, and Harmony
- 9.1 Explanation: Interests and Laws of Reason
- 9.1.1 Interests of Reason
- 9.1.2 Presumptive Laws of Reason
- 9.2 Unity: Interests and Laws of Reason
- 9.2.1 Interests of Reason
- 9.2.2 Presumptive Laws of Reason
- 9.3 Specificity: Interests and Laws of Reason
- 9.3.1 Interests of Reason
- 9.3.2 Presumptive Laws of Reason
- 9.4 Affinity: Interests and Laws of Reason
- 9.4.1 Interests of Reason
- 9.4.2 Presumptive Laws of Reason
- 9.5 Harmony: Interests and Laws of Reason
- 9.5.1 Interests of Reason
- 9.5.2 Presumptive Laws of Reason
- 9.6 Final Remarks: Systematic Unity and Harmony in an Ideally Rational World
- 10 Rational Nature
- 10.1 Rational Nature: Abilities, Interests, and Principles of the Power of Reason
- 10.2 Protecting Rational Nature: Interests and Laws of Reason
- 10.2.1 Interests of Reason
- 10.2.2 Presumptive Laws of Reason
- 10.2.3 Conflicting Presumptions
- 10.3 Developing Rational Nature: Interests and Laws of Reason
- 10.3.1 Interests of Reason
- 10.3.2 Presumptive Laws of Reason
- 10.3.3 Doubts about Perfecting Other People
- 10.4 Exercising Rational Nature: Interests and Laws of Reason
- 10.4.1 Interests of Reason
- 10.4.2 Presumptive Laws of Reason
- 10.4.3 Conflicting Interests and Laws
- 10.5 Final Remarks: Creating Rational Nature
- 11 Knowledge, Error, and Enlightenment
- 11.1 Representing the Truth: Interests of Reason
- 11.1.1 Understanding
- 11.1.2 Insight
- 11.1.3 Knowledge
- 11.2 Minimizing Error: Interests of Reason
- 11.3 Thinking for Oneself: Interests of Reason
- 11.4 Truth, Error, and Enlightenment: Laws of Reason
- 11.4.1 Presumptive Laws Concerning Ourselves
- 11.4.2 Presumptive Laws Concerning Others
- 11.4.3 Presumptive Laws Concerning Freedom of Thought
- 11.4.4 Presumptive Laws Concerning Communication
- 11.5 Final Remarks: Conflicts
- 12 Freedoms
- 12.1 Negative Freedom: Interests and Laws of Reason
- 12.1.1 Interests of Reason
- 12.1.2 Developing the Power of Choice
- 12.1.3 Impairing the Power of Choice
- 12.1.4 Using the Power of Choice
- 12.2 Motivational Freedom: Interests and Laws of Reason
- 12.2.1 Interests of Reason
- 12.2.2 Presumptive Laws of Reason
- 12.3 Deliberative Freedom: Interests and Laws of Reason
- 12.3.1 Interests of Reason
- 12.3.2 Presumptive Laws of Reason
- 12.4 Freedom of Action: Interests and Laws of Reason
- 12.4.1 Interests of Reason
- 12.4.2 Presumptive Laws of Reason
- 12.5 Character Freedom: Interests and Laws of Reason
- 12.5.1 Interests of Reason
- 12.5.2 Presumptive Laws of Reason
- 12.6 Final Remarks: Sovereign Freedom
- 13 Happiness
- 13.1 Happiness
- 13.1.1 Choosing our Conception of Happiness
- 13.1.2 Ingredients of our Conception of Happiness
- 13.1.3 Defining our Conception of Happiness
- 13.1.4 Happiness of Human Beings
- 13.2 Specifying our Conceptions of Happiness: Interests and Laws of Reason
- 13.3 Promoting the Happiness of Everyone: Interests and Laws of Reason
- 13.3.1 Ends of Happiness
- 13.3.2 Promoting Happiness
- 13.3.3 Right to Pursue Happiness
- 13.3.4 Avoiding Needs
- 13.3.5 Harmonize our Happiness with the Happiness of Others
- 13.3.6 Other Presumptive Laws of Reason
- 13.4 Further Issues about Promoting the Happiness of Everyone
- 13.4.1 Utilitarianism
- 13.4.2 Immoral Conceptions of Happiness
- 13.4.3 Promoting Our Own Happiness
- 13.4.4 Maximizing Happiness
- 13.5 Desires and Feelings Toward the Happiness of Everyone: Interests and Laws of Reason
- 13.5.1 Natural Feelings Toward the Happiness of Others
- 13.5.2 Natural Desires Toward the Happiness of Others
- 13.6 Final Remarks: Conflicts with Interests of Reason in Solidarity, Freedom, and Happiness
- 13.6.1 Conflicts Within Happiness
- 13.6.2 Conflicts Between Happiness and Solidarity
- 13.6.3 Conflicts Between Happiness and Freedom
- 14 Natural Perfection
- 14.1 Natural Perfection: Fitness for All Possible Ends
- 14.1.1 Harmony Relation
- 14.1.1.1 Harmony, Dissonance, and Neutrality
- 14.1.1.2 Intrinsic Properties of a Thing
- 14.1.1.3 Ends
- 14.1.1.4 Intrinsic Properties That Realize or Frustrate an End
- 14.1.2 Sets of Harmony Relations
- 14.1.3 The Idea of Natural Perfection
- 14.1.4 Degrees of Natural Perfection
- 14.1.5 Contradictory Ends
- 14.2 Natural Perfection of Human Persons: Someone who Harmonizes with All Possible Ends
- 14.2.1 Harmony Relation
- 14.2.2 Intrinsic Properties of a Person
- 14.2.3 Ends
- 14.2.4 Intrinsic Properties that Realize or Frustrate an End
- 14.2.5 Natural Perfection of a Human Person
- 14.2.6 Degrees of Natural Perfection of Human Persons
- 14.2.7 Further Discussion
- 14.3 Natural Perfection of Everyone: Interests of Reason
- 14.4 Natural Perfection of Everyone: Presumptive Laws of Reason
- 14.5 Final Remarks: Further Issues about Promoting the Natural Perfection of Everyone
- 15 Respect and Expressions of Respect
- 15.1 Respect and Expressions of Respect: Judgments of Inner Worth
- 15.1.1 Judgments of Inner Worth
- 15.1.2 Inner Worth
- 15.1.3 Respect
- 15.1.4 Expressions of Respect
- 15.2 Respect and Expressions of Respect: Interests of Reason
- 15.3 Respect: Laws of Reason
- 15.3.1 Tendencies of Judgment
- 15.3.2 Other Judgments We Have
- 15.3.3 Imagination
- 15.3.4 Natural Desires
- 15.3.5 Natural Feelings
- 15.3.6 Demands and Attention
- 15.3.7 Further Discussion
- 15.4 Expressions of Respect: Laws of Reason
- 15.4.1 Language
- 15.4.2 Demeanor
- 15.4.3 Actions
- 15.4.4 Social Practices
- 15.4.5 Portrayals
- 15.4.6 Natural Signs
- 15.4.7 Mistaken Signs
- 15.4.8 Further Discussion
- 15.5 Violations of Respect and Expressions of Respect: Laws of Reason
- 15.6 Connections with Other Interests of Reason: Autonomy, Knowledge, Solidarity, and Happiness
- 15.6.1 Self-Governance
- 15.6.2 Knowledge
- 15.6.3 Solidarity
- 15.6.4 Happiness
- 15.7 Final Remarks: Positive and Negative Respect
- 16 Solidarity
- 16.1 The Value of Loving Relationships in Reflective Common Sense: Forming, Maintaining, Perfecting, Respecting, and Promoting Them
- 16.1.1 Forming Loving Relationships
- 16.1.2 Maintaining Loving Relationships
- 16.1.3 Perfecting Loving Relationships
- 16.1.4 Respecting Loving Relationships
- 16.1.5 Promoting Loving Relationships
- 16.2 Kantian Difficulties with Loving Relationships
- 16.2.1 Revise Common Sense
- 16.2.2 Presumptive Laws of Happiness
- 16.2.3 Instrumental Justifications
- 16.3 Solidarity: Love and Trust Based on Shared Commitments Favored by Interests of Reason
- 16.3.1 Shared Rational Commitments
- 16.3.2 Trust in Shared Rational Commitments
- 16.3.3 Love
- 16.3.4 Trust in Love
- 16.4 Solidarity: Interests of Reason
- 16.5 Solidarity: Laws of Reason
- 16.5.1 Forming Relationships of Solidarity
- 16.5.2 Maintaining Relationships of Solidarity
- 16.5.3 Perfecting Relationships of Solidarity
- 16.5.4 Respecting Relationships of Solidarity
- 16.5.5 Promoting Relationships of Solidarity
- 16.6 Final Remarks: Sovereign Reason in Solidarity
- Postscript
- Abbreviations for Kant's Works
- References
- Index
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