OUTLINE: 0:00 - Introduction 0:25 - The 'Sensibility First' Approach 9:07 - Conceptualism versus non-conceptualism 21:32 - The Myth of the Given 30:32 - Applying the 'Sensibility First' approach to Kant's Practical Philosophy 39:10 - Fact of Reason | Affect of Reason 47:10 - Change of Heart
To the rather generic formulation of the moral imperative I'd like to point out that Professor Hanna could have reffed to two central figure in the ancient Geeks' take on morality as those of Oedipus and Antigone .
OUTLINE:
0:00 - Introduction
0:25 - The 'Sensibility First' Approach
9:07 - Conceptualism versus non-conceptualism
21:32 - The Myth of the Given
30:32 - Applying the 'Sensibility First' approach to Kant's Practical Philosophy
39:10 - Fact of Reason | Affect of Reason
47:10 - Change of Heart
Intuition is nothing without conceptualisation. It’s the conceptualisation that makes a thinking animal to recognise a particular reality.
14:12 McDowell
17:23 Gareth Evans book reference
35:36 Kant & Religion
36:40 Groundwork Metaphysics Morals
PODCAST CHANNELS:
Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/5IaosTbUJoULAKeDk2eNk0?si=4_eCcYcWQN2mZXE1WOwRTw
ITunes/Apple: podcasts.apple.com/nl/podcast/dare-to-know-philosophy-podcast/id1508888549
Also relevant is Alfonso Lingus' The Imperative.
How is it possible to do the wrong thing freely?
You are acting freely if and only if you are acting morally.
Thoughts without content are empty. Intuition without concepts is blind.
strange jumps in the audio ???
Lonergan is relevant here.
To the rather generic formulation of the moral imperative I'd like to point out that Professor Hanna could have reffed to two central figure in the ancient Geeks' take on morality as those of Oedipus and Antigone .