"Among those who stressed the ‘autos’ were Kant’s early [[w:German Romanticism|Romantic followers and critics (usually both followers and critics at once) who thought that each of us should be the author of our own morality. My morality, therefore, is valid only for me, as an expression of my unique individuality. After all, a moral law proceeding from my will seems by that fact alone to be a law valid only for me, perhaps even a law whose content is subject to my whims and arbitrariness. But that leads to a natural question: How can a law bind me at all if I am its author, because that apparently puts me in a position to change or invalidate it at my own discretion? The same thoughts, once we try to answer this question, might also lead in the direction of associating the concept of moral authority with some notion of individual “authenticity,” “choosing oneself,” or “becoming who one is,” sometimes taking those who travel this road beyond morality entirely. For just that reason, however, the self-esteem which appears to ground Kantian morality can begin to seem (as it does to some of Kant’s critics) like a kind of arrogance or even a perverse self-deification, in which each person blasphemously usurps the traditional place of the Deity as the giver of moral laws. The tradition that went in this direction therefore included some, such as the later Schelling and Kierkegaard, whose encounter with Kantian ethics ended (paradoxically) in some form of “theonomy” or theological voluntarism that either preserved the notion of autonomy only by a speculative pantheist merging of the self and the Deity or else rejected outright (as a demonic or satanic principle) the whole idea that the rational creature might tear itself away from its creator and claim authority over itself."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Allen W. Wood, Kantian Ethics (2008), Ch. 6. Autonomy
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Autonomy
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Autonomy
73 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Autonomy →
Related Quotes
"The failing of contemporary criticism is double: Hand in hand with the suppression of aesthetic autonomy, one finds a…"
"Periodization is the disciplinary strategy with which the present establishes its rule over all time and encourages c…"
"The university ... must be contemptuous of public opinion because it has within it the source of autonomy—the q…"
"He who feels that in his inmost being he cannot be compared with others, will be his own lawgiver. For one thing is n…"
"From none but self expect applause; He noblest lives and noblest dies who makes and keeps his self-made laws."
"Anyone whose needs are small seems threatening to the rich, because he’s always ready to escape their control."
"There cannot be any politics of resistance, aesthetics of emancipation, or prose and poetry of agential autonomy in h…"
"We face a conflict between civilisation and culture, which used to be on the same side. Civilisation means rational r…"
"A man should learn to detect and watch that gleam of light which flashes across his mind from within more than the lu…"
"It is easy in the world to live after the world’s opinion. It is easy in solitude to live after our own. But the grea…"