Last Note from the Tilt-A-Whirl!

By Mark Ward

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Nathan Wilson quotes Immanuel Kant’s categorical imperative, then he invents an instructive dialogue between two students evaluating it:

Kant’s categorical imperative: Act only according to maxims which you can desire to be universal.

Student One: That doesn’t make sense. It’s a cheapened golden rule. Without a creating God imposing it, it’s entirely arbitrary. Logic can’t give you goodness, just validity. And if it could, how would a “rational” law achieve any actual authority in an accidental world?

Student Two rebuts: Think about bicycle theft. What if everyone stole bicycles?

Student One: We’d all have someone else’s bicycle.

—N. D. Wilson, Notes from the Tilt-A-Whirl