The Partially Examined Life Philosophy Podcast

Ep. 372: Kant's Ethics Lectures (Part Two)

Aug 4, 2025
Delve into Kant's intriguing ethical framework where duties to oneself take precedence. Explore the complexities of personal integrity and charity as a moral obligation. Unravel the intricacies of desire, autonomy, and the ethical dilemmas of suicide and self-harm. Examine how societal shame influences our understanding of sexuality and objectification. Discover the layers of love—from erotic connections to ethical obligations—and how they intertwine with personal rights and humane treatment in relationships.
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INSIGHT

Primary Duties to Oneself

  • Duties to oneself are primary as we must honor our own humanity to be free and moral agents.
  • Suicide violates autonomy by using freedom to eliminate freedom, making it morally inadmissible in Kant's view.
INSIGHT

Body as Moral Instrument

  • Kant argues the body is our instrument for moral action, so harming or selling parts of it violates moral duty.
  • Suicide is thus morally indefensible because it destroys the body that enables moral agency.
INSIGHT

Using Body and Labor Morally

  • Kant distinguishes between acceptable use of the body and selling it, deeming prostitution and sexual exploitation as violations of personhood.
  • Using others as mere means fails Kant's test of respecting them as ends, which some labors may breach.
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