“The Constant Companion of Virtue”: On the Dilemma and Political Implications of Kantian Honor

Publication Type

Journal Article

Publication Date

9-2020

Abstract

This article provides a reinterpretation of Kantian honor to resolve an ongoing debate concerning Kant's mixed attitude toward honor and to clarify the political implications of honor. Kant develops two distinct types of honor in his practical philosophy: natural honor as a human desire and ethical honor as a transcendental virtue. The conflict between these two types of honor can be resolved not in Kant's ethics but in his political theory, which tolerates nonmoral motivations owing to their positive impact on politics and which presumes an imperfect world where political authority has difficulties in properly punishing disrespect. As a viable motivation for citizens to fight disrespect in a principled way, a reformed Kantian honor that combines the normative content of ethical honor and the motivating power of natural honor into a single whole can be conducive to the politics of mutual respect.

Keywords

Ethics, Honor, Philosophy, Political Science, Reconciliation

Discipline

Ethics and Political Philosophy | Political Science

Research Areas

Political Science

Publication

Review of Politics

Volume

82

Issue

4

First Page

548

Last Page

570

ISSN

0034-6705

Identifier

10.1017/S0034670520000583

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Additional URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0034670520000583

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