
doi: 10.5209/resf.75763
En los textos de Kant sobre los deberes hacia uno mismo cabe distinguir dos líneas argumentativas diferentes: una en las Lecciones de ética de 1784/1785 (Moralphilosophie Collins), y la otra en la Metafísica de las costumbres (1797). Este artículo defiende la línea argumentativa de las Lecciones de ética y reivindica un deber hacia uno mismo: el deber de no dejarse utilizar por otros. Posteriormente se analizan algunas objeciones que se han formulado o que es posible formular contra este concepto.
Kant, M. G. Singer, Schopenhauer, idealismo trascendental, ética, deber, ethics, J. S. Mill, duty, transcendental idealism
Kant, M. G. Singer, Schopenhauer, idealismo trascendental, ética, deber, ethics, J. S. Mill, duty, transcendental idealism
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