Some Implications from the Primacy of the Good Will
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.36311/2318-0501.2015.v3n1.03.p27Resumo
There are two opposed tendencies in the interpretation of the good will: the interpreters consider either the value
of the gifts of nature and fortune in isolation or apart from their combination with a good will or the value of the good will completely apart from its relation to the gifts. I dealt with the first interpretative tendency in a previous paper. Here I draw some implications from my thesis of the primacy of the good will in order to deal with the second interpretative tendency, which can be seen in authorized Kant’s interpreters, such as Karl Ameriks and Allen Wood.