Famous Quotes & Sayings

Christine M. Korsgaard Quotes & Sayings

Enjoy the top 5 famous quotes, sayings and quotations by Christine M. Korsgaard.

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Famous Quotes By Christine M. Korsgaard

Christine M. Korsgaard Quotes 1707121

[A} maxim's legal character must be intrinsic: it must have what I shall call 'lawlike form.' this is why legal character, or universality, must be understood as lawlike form, that is, as a requirement of universalizability. — Christine M. Korsgaard

Christine M. Korsgaard Quotes 1436393

If you view yourself as having a value-conferring status in virtue of of your power of rational choice, you must view anyone who has the power of rational choice as having...a value conferring status. — Christine M. Korsgaard

Christine M. Korsgaard Quotes 1545432

Thus we find that the unconditioned condition of the goodness of anything is rational nature...To play this role, however, rational nature must itself be something of unconditional value--and end in itself. — Christine M. Korsgaard

Christine M. Korsgaard Quotes 1804775

On the other hand, when I think of other philosophers who have spent their lives developing some system, and I admire their work even though I disagree with it, I think of them as the guardians of some set of ideas and lines of thoughts that philosophers through time have found it fruitful and illuminating to think through. That seems to me a valuable thing to do, even if in the end I don't think their views are right. But it's a little hard to think of one's own work in that way. After all, I believe the things that I believe. — Christine M. Korsgaard

Christine M. Korsgaard Quotes 1890287

The reason for participating in a general will, and so for endorsing one's identity as a citizen, is that we share the world with others who are free, not that we have confidence in their judgment. A citizen who acts on a vote that has gone the way she thinks it should may in one sense be more wholehearted than one who must submit to a vote that has not gone her way. But a citizen in whom the general will triumphs gracefully over the private will exhibits a very special kind of autonomy, which is certainly not a lesser form. — Christine M. Korsgaard