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Contents Acknowledgments 000 Introduction: Methodology and Two Kinds of Ethics 1 I. Methodology 000 II. Empirical Ethics and A Priori Ethics 000 III. The Structure of the Argument 000 Chapter 1. Kant's Psychology in the Nonmoral Context 000 I. The Faculty of Desire 000 II. Determinations of the Faculty of Desire 000 III. Feeling: The Ground of Desire 000 Chapter 2. Desire Formation and Hedonism 000 I. The Ambiguous Role of Pleasure in Desire Formation 000 II. Reconciling Kant's Distinct Accounts of Desire Formation 000 III. Anticipatory Pleasure and the Faculty of Desire 000 Chapter 3. Nonmoral Freedom in Kant 000 I. Nonmoral Determinism 000 II. Allison and the Incorporation Thesis 000 III. The Concept of Nonmoral Freedom 000 Chapter 4. Rational Action: Interests and Maxims 000 I. The Incorporation Thesis and Weakness of the Will 000 II. Incorporation of Incentives: A Closer Look at the Formation of Nonmoral Interests and Maxims 000 Chapter 5. Respect as an Incentive to Moral Action 000 I. Some Readings of Kant on Moral Motivation 000 II. Evidence for a Structural Parallel between Moral and Nonmoral Action 000 III. The Structure of Moral Motivation 000 Conclusion: Reath and the Question of Motivation 000 I. Reath on Respect 000 II. Reath and Theories of Action in Kant 000 Notes 000 References 000 Index 000
Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication:
Kant, Immanuel, 1724-1804.
Moral motivation.