Kant on moral feeling and respect
Keywords: 
Moral feeling
Feeling of respect
Self-esteem
Aesthetic predispositions
Moral contentment
Moral incentive
Issue Date: 
2022
Publisher: 
Cambridge University Press
ISSN: 
1369-4154
Note: 
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence
Citation: 
Kolomý, V. (Vojtech). "Kant on moral feeling and respect". Kantian Review. (28), 2022, 105 - 123
Abstract
Although in his earlier ethical writings Kant explains the concept of moral feeling, inherited from the British sentimentalists, as a peculiar feeling of respect for the moral law that functions as an incentive for moral actions, the Doctrine of Virtue seems to add complexity to the issue. There, Kant discusses two similar aesthetic predispositions, moral feeling and respect, whose relationship to the feeling of respect is far from clear. This article offers a much needed elucidation of the relationship between these three concepts. In the first part, I show that Kant, in the writings before the Doctrine of Virtue, transforms the British sentimentalists’ construal of moral feeling into that of the feeling of respect as the sole moral incentive. In the second part, I argue that, although in the Doctrine of Virtue Kant distinguishes, for a specific reason, between the aesthetic predisposition of moral feeling and that of respect, they are both ultimately identical to the feeling of respect. The conclusion is that nothing of substance changes between Kant’s earlier thinking and his views in the Doctrine of Virtue; for Kant there is just one feeling that properly deserves the name of moral feeling, the feeling of respect.

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