Does Kant Reduce Religion to Morality?
Prof. Stephen Palmquist,
D.Phil. (Oxon)
Department of Religion and Philosophy
Hong Kong Baptist University
I. Introduction: The myth and its source
Does Kant reduce religion to morality? Before answering this question we
must clarify just what it means to "reduce" one idea or way of
thinking to another. What would it mean for someone to
"reduce religion to morality"?
Reductionism can be understood in either a loose or a strict sense, which we
can call "explanatory" and "eliminative" reductionism,
respectively.[1]
In the loose sense reductionism means explaining everything relevant to a given
field of inquiry in terms of a single, all-pervasive factor outside that field,
which is necessary to a proper understanding of that field.
For example, proponents of a double aspect theory of the relationship between
brain states and mental states might argue that every mental state is directly
correlated to some brain state; yet this would not require them to treat the
two types of states as identical, or to advocate the actual description
of all mental states in terms of brain states. Strict, eliminative reductionists, by contrast, believe one special way of
explaining something is not only necessary, but self-sufficient,
so that it can actually replace, or explain away
all other possible explanations. Proponents of strict reductionism would
argue that all talk of mental states is pointless, since nothing but
brain states exists or has any value.
If we accept this distinction between explanatory and eliminative forms of
reductionism, then the question occupying our attention can be rephrased in two
ways: loosely, Does Kant
regard morality as the single explanatory factor in terms of which all that is
necessary to religion can be explained? and
strictly, Does Kant believe religion can be "explained away" as
nothing but a special form of morality? In other words, does Kant
think morality is necessary for all true religion, and if so,
does he also think it is sufficient?
To many readers of Kant the answer to our question
seems so obvious that they never bother even to pose the question. Kant
clearly does reduce religion to morality (in both senses), so the
story goes, for he consistently stipulates in defining religion that
"Religion is...the recognition of all duties as divine
commands."[2]
Does this not require us to regard religion as nothing but a special way of
looking at man's duties--i.e., at his morality? Indeed, we
need go no further than the title of Kant's most important book on religion, Religion
within the Limits of Reason Alone, to see that he assumes right from
the start that religion can and ought to be viewed only within a
narrow set of rational limits--a reduction if ever there was one!
Likewise, if we open the book itself, we find that on the first few pages of
the first edition Preface Kant tells us morality is not based on religion;
rather, religion is based on morality. And throughout the rest of the
book, he repeatedly passes judgment on religious beliefs and practices by
asking about their value for the moral improvement of the religious believer.
We should not be surprised, therefore, to find interpreters as prestigious as
Ernst Cassirer, whose study of Kant's life and works
is usually quite trustworthy, assuming an affirmative answer to the question
at issue without supporting his view with any textual evidence:
...the Kantian
system does not in general recognize the philosophy of religion as a fully
independent member of the system, as a way of looking at things that is idiosyncratic
and rests on autonomous and independent assumptions.... [Instead,] the
substance of his philosophy of religion comprises for him
only a confirmation of and a corollary of the substance of his ethics.
Religion 'within the limits of reason alone'...has no essential content other
than that of pure morality. The conversion of pure rational religion into
pure ethics is required...[3]
Moreover, it is not uncommon, especially in brief
summaries of Kant's philosophy of religion, to read explicit statements of an
even more dogmatic kind, such as when Edwards proclaims: "...we have
in Kant the complete reductionof
religion to morality."[4]
However, if we put aside this long tradition and examine Kant's own claims with
an open mind, we will find that the traditional, unequivocally affirmative
answer to our question is not faithful to his true intentions. Sadly, it
comes so close to a proper understanding of the points Kant was actually trying
to make, that its subtle distortions have, to my knowledge, remained virtually
unchallenged. In order to reveal these distortions, let us first look
more closely at the three sources most often used to defend the
traditional myth of eliminative reductionism: the title and
the first Preface to Kant's book on religion, and his definition
of religion. For a proper understanding of these is
indispensable if we are to understand Kant's intentions. We can
then examine in section III the general content of his system of
religion. Although a thoroughgoing interpretation of the details of this
religious system is beyond the scope of this study, such a general overview
will provide us with enough evidence to make a fair assessment in section IV of
the extent to which Kant's theory of religion reduces religion to morality.
II. Prolegomena to Kant's System of Religion
There are two common assumptions about the title of Kant's book
on religion (Die Religion innerhalb der Grenzen der
blossen Vernunft)
which, when made, virtually determine in advance that Kant's views will be
interpreted strictly, in terms of eliminative reductionism. Yet, as we
shall see, both of these assumptions are utterly opposed to Kant's expressed intentions.
The first assumption is that Grenzen
refers to a strict limitation placed on religion by reason--a
limitation which (like all true "limits", e.g. in mathematics)
establishes an absolute barrier which cannot in any way be overcome. Yet
Kant explains elsewhere that Grenzen
must not be regarded in such a strict or one-sided way: "Bounds [Grenzen]...always presuppose a space outside
a certain definite place and inclosing it; limits [Schranken]
do not require this, but are mere negations which affect a quantity so far as
it is not absolutely complete."[5]
Despite his reputation to the contrary, which developed as a result of the
unfortunate "patchwork" interpretations of his work, Kant is usually
very careful to give precise meanings to the terms he uses, and then to stick
by those meanings. So we should give serious consideration to the
implications of this passage for the title of Kant's book. If Kant had
wanted to say that reason imposes limits upon religion which must not be
surpassed, then he would have surely used the term Schranken.
His use of Grenzen rather indicates
that he has in mind a boundary (like a fence dividing two
portions of land), on either side of which we can find legitimate (though
different) aspects of one and the same territory (viz. religion). On one
side we find what is rationally necessary and on the other, what is empirically
real. Kant's title, then, does not reveal a desire to force
all aspects of religion into a single, rational mold; rather, it reflects his
intent to examine one side of a fundamentally two-sided issue.
The second assumption regarding the title of Kant's book concerns the proper
interpretation of the phrase blossen
Vernunft, which has traditionally been
rendered into English either as "Reason Alone" or as "Mere
Reason". The former choice, adopted by Greene and Hudson in their
standard translation of this work, would clearly imply self-sufficiency, and
hence a tendency towards strict reductionism on Kant's part. Yet, such a
translation not only stretches the literal meaning of this common German word,
but it neglects an important nuance in the original. The word blossen can mean either "mere"
(thus indicating that something more is possible and perhaps even
required for full satisfaction) or "naked". Greene and Hudson
were certainly aware of this dual meaning, since they actually used "naked
reason" as the translation for blossen
Vernunft at several points in their text
[see e.g. RBBR 10(9)]; nevertheless, they suppressed this
implication entirely in their translation of the title itself. Perhaps
their reason was that, if Kant had wanted to use "naked" in his
title, he almost certainly would have used the more explicit word, nackt. There is, however, a third
alternative which does not seem to have occurred to any of Kant's
translators. For there is one English word which
parallels the dual meaning of blossen
almost exactly: that word is "bare", which, just like blossen, can mean either "mere" or
"naked".[6]
When these two mistaken assumptions are brought to light, a more balanced
translation comes into view: Religion within the Bounds of Bare
Reason (RBBR) is the best English translation of what Kant
himself intended to say in the title of his book. That Kant's use of blossen was an intentional,
though covert, way of referring to nakedness can be clearly seen
by taking note of the fact that in the text itself Kant makes use on several occasions
of the analogy of "the religion of reason" being like a naked
body which can be rendered presentable, or socially
acceptable, only by dressing it in some type of clothing [see
e.g. RBBR 195(183)]. If Kant had not wanted to hint at such
an analogy in his title, he almost certainly would have used his more technical
term, reinen ("pure") to
refer to the inner or "invisible" aspects of all true religion.
Similarly, that Kant's use of Grenzen
is meant to imply territorial boundaries, rather than absolute
limits, is also suggested by other analogies which he uses from time to
time, such as when he considers what happens when one side
"trespasses" on the other side's property, or "imports
something" from the other side for use within "its own economy",
or "declares war on" the other side, etc. [see e.g. RBBR
9-10(9), 13(12)].
The "double aspect" character of Kant's system of religion is also
made clear by several other analogies used from time to time in RBBR.
Kant consistently refers to "the pure religion of reason" not
as itself constituting everything necessary for
true religion, but rather as providing us with its necessary core
or "kernel". Other (i.e., non-moral) aspects of religion are
never regarded by Kant as identical to false religion; rather,
they become false only when the religious person fails to
recognize them as the "shell" or "vehicle" (i.e., as the means)
through which the "kernel" or "canon" (i.e., the end)
of religion can be promoted, and as a result detaches them from
their proper grounding in morality.[7]
All these analogies imply that, as we shall see in more detail in section III,
Kant is thinking not about exclusiveness, but about the proper
priority between two necessary elements. Kant gives
these two elements a number of different names, the most common of which are
"faith" and "pure religion" as the two aspects of
"religion". (These two senses of "religion" must be
kept in mind if we are to avoid misunderstanding Kant's view; so we will return
to them again shortly.) Indeed, just as each of Kant's Critical works is
designed not to establish a system of metaphysics itself, but to prepare the foundation
upon which to construct the building of metaphysics, so also the
title of RBBR ought to remind us that this book is designed more
as the Critical (or even transcendental) prolegomena to real (empirical)
religion, than as an attempt to replace all empirical
manifestations of religion with a "pure" alternative.
On its own, of course, a proper understanding of the title of RBBR
does not constitute a conclusive argument on the basis of which we could answer
the question with which we are here concerned. Rather, it only provides us with
hints which may or may not prove to shed new light on the text itself.
Let us therefore turn our attention now to the beginning of the first Preface,
where Kant is often interpreted as saying religion is just a kind of footnote
or appendage to morality.
In the first few paragraphs of this
Preface, Kant asserts:
...morality...stands
in need neither of the idea of another Being over [man], for him to apprehend
his duty, nor of an incentive other than the law itself... Hence for its own
sake morality does not need religion at all...; ...it
is self-sufficient.... But although for its own sake morality needs no
representation of an end which must precede the determining of the will, it is
quite possible that it is necessarily related to such an end, taken not as the
ground, but as the inevitable consequence of maxims adopted as conformable to
that end.... Morality thus leads ineluctably to religion, through which it extends
itself to the idea of a powerful moral Lawgiver, outside of
mankind, for Whose will that is the final end (of creation) which at
the same time can and ought to be man's final end. [RBBR
3-6(3-6), emphasis added]
Three key points arise out of this passage.
Each of these leads to eliminative reductionism if it is just slightly
misinterpreted. In what follows, therefore, I will attempt to explain not
only what Kant is trying to say in each case, but also how his words are
misconstrued by the traditional interpretation.
First, Kant is saying that even though morality is logically, or
perhaps transcendentally self-sufficient (i.e., even though no
reference to morality is needed to explain what morality is),
morality is nevertheless teleologically
incomplete (i.e., its ultimate purpose cannot be realized
by remaining merely within its own bounds). Just as the foundation of a
building is "complete" in the sense that it can stand all on its own,
and does not depend on anything prior to it in order to serve its
purpose, and yet its purpose is not complete until an actual
building is constructed upon it, so also the nature of moral action can be understood
apart from any reference to religion, and yet the purpose of
morality in general, as well as the actual fulfilment
of the task morality presents to us, cannot be understood without stepping beyond
the exclusively moral standpoint to adopt a new, religious
standpoint, based on the moral. This point is sure to be misunderstood if
we fail to take special note of Kant's distinction between the
"ground" and "consequence" (or "end") of morality.
When Kant says morality "leads to religion", he does not mean
religion can therefore be explained away in terms of morality; on the contrary,
he means religion as such fulfils a necessary
function. As far as its "ground" is concerned, morality is
"self-sufficient": all we need is our own (human) practical
reason. But as far as its "consequence" is concerned, we must
look beyond mere morality in hopes of finding some third
thing which can bridge the gap between the theoretical and the
practical. And that "third thing", in RBBR, is
religion.
The common view that for Kant true religion is entirely humanistic
(man-centered) [see note 4 above] neglects the fact that in this passage he
says morality necessarily "extends itself", or points beyond itself,
to the idea of a God. The "final end (of creation)" to which
Kant refers is undoubtedly mankind.[8]
However, the second point arising out of this passage is that an entirely
man-centered philosophy is not the type that best serves the interests of
mankind. Rather, the purpose of morality (which is man-centred) will best be fulfilled by viewing morality in
terms of something outside man. Within Kant's moral system,
the idea of God had to be introduced as a postulate just to
conceive of the possibility of reaching the goal of establishing
the highest good. Now he is saying the only way morality can fulfil its purpose is to regard this possibility (i.e., the
postulate of the existence of God) as an actuality. In
other words, only if we interpret our moral experience as one which is guided
by a Being who shares with us a common goal do we have any hope of completing
the task morality sets for itself. This
extension of religion beyond morality into the realm of empirical reality
is implied when Kant says: "Morality as such is ideal, but religion
imbues it with vigour, beauty, and reality."[9]
Once the teleological function of RBBR is fully
appreciated, a third point can be drawn out of the passage quoted from the
first Preface. The function of RBBR in Kant's philosophical
System is related most closely to the function of the third Critique
(which is to synthesize the theoretical and practical aspects of the first two Critiques).
Accordingly, the relationships between the three parts of Kant's Critical
System can be pictured in the following way:
theoretical
(first Critique)
empirical
(third Critique
and RBBR)
practical
(second Critique)
Both RBBR and the third Critique
try to answer the third question which Kant says characterizes the tasks of the
philosopher: "What may I hope?"[10] Indeed, I believe part of Kant's
reason for writing Religion within the Bounds of Bare Reason was
that he realized the third Critique, published three years
earlier, did not provide a sufficient answer to this question. If so,
then RBBR can be regarded as his new attempt to complete the Critical
part of his System.[11]
A careful examination of Kant's various definitions of
"religion" will not only support the above suggestion as to the
proper place of RBBR in Kant's System, but will provide the
context for a proper understanding of Kant's "official" definition
in RBBR. In his Lectures on Education Kant
defines religion as "the [moral] law in us, so far as it is imprinted upon
us by a legislator and a judge; it is morality applied to the knowledge of God
[i.e., to theology]."[12]
Conversely, he claims in Lectures on Philosophical Theology that
"religion is nothing but the application of theology to morality".[13] These two statements would
contradict each other if for Kant religion were simply identical to, or a
sub-category of, morality. The statements are actually suggesting, on the
contrary, that morality and theology are the two complementary
opposites which, when combined in a synthetic unity, give rise to
religion. This is why Kant can say both that "morality
leads inevitably to religion" [RBBR 8n(7n)] and that
"theology also leads directly to religion":[14] each leads to
religion, because each is incomplete on its own, just as each of the first two Critiques
can be said to lead to the third Critique. The religion
towards which they lead must therefore clothe the "bare" body of pure
moral religion with some theoretical clothing, in the form of an
"historical" or "revealed" or "ecclesiastical
faith" [see e.g. RBBR 102-103(94), 162(151)]. A real
(i.e., empirical) religion which can do this without distorting the priority of
the "pure religious faith" at its core can qualify for what Kant
calls "the universal religion of mankind" [RBBR
155(143)].
If we turn now to Kant's standard definition of religion, the error lying
behind the strict reductionist interpretation can
easily be exposed. The fact that his definition is intended to extend
morality beyond its own boundaries to theology, and then beyond both to a new,
distinctively religious perspective, becomes especially obvious if we look at
the context in which Kant proposes his definition:[15]
Religion is (subjectively regarded) the recognition of all duties as
divine commands. That religion in which I must know in advance that
something is a divine command in order to recognize it as my duty, is the revealed
religion...; in contrast, that religion in which I must first know that
something is my duty before I can accept it as a divine injunction is the natural
religion.
In revealed religion, then, morality conforms to
theology, while in natural religion theology conforms to morality [see CJ
460 and LEd 477(184)]. Kant goes
on to distinguish between two types of natural religion, only the first of
which would be reductive in the strict sense. He contrasts the
"naturalist", who "denies the reality of all supernatural divine
revelation" with the "pure rationalist", who "recognizes
revelation, but asserts that to know and accept it as real is not a necessary
requisite to religion" [RBBR 154-55(143)].
Although in the first paragraph of this section [RBBR 153-5(142-3)] Kant
never advocates any of these views, in the next paragraph he describes the
position of the pure rationalist (which does not entail eliminative
reductionism) in a way that clearly suggests his sympathy for it. The
rationalist, it seems, has read the first Critique! For he "must...restrict himself within the limits of human
insight", yet without dogmatizing, as does the naturalist (and the strict reductionist). He then contrasts his position[16] with "pure supernaturalism",
which would tend towards a rather different form of strict reductionism:
its proponent "holds that belief in [revelation] is necessary to the
universal religion", because human duties are nothing but God's
revealed will. For Kant "the question at issue" is whether the
pure rationalist or the pure supernaturalist position
is correct.
After making this "subjective" distinction between different ways of
conceiving of the "inner possibility" of religion, Kant makes
another, "objective" distinction between the
"characteristics" of a religion which determine how it is to be
"shared widely with others" [RBBR 155(143)]. The
main characteristic of "the natural religion" is that
"everyone can be convinced [of its truth] through his own reason",
whereas that of "a learned religion" is that "one
can convince others only through the agency of learning". Only the
former can qualify as "the universal religion", because only it can
be spread to all men, regardless of their educational
status. He points out, however, that a religion such as Christianity
might be "objectively a natural religion, though subjectively
one that has been revealed" [RBBR 156(144)].
Seen in its proper context, Kant's definition of religion suggests the
following picture of the synthetic relationship between theology, morality and
religion:
theology
(revealed
religion) pure supernatural religion
true empirical religion
(universal religion)
morality pure rational religion
(natural
religion)
A "revealed" religion is one which takes
theology (or some form of revelation) as its sole basis, rejecting the need for
any special aid from reason. A "natural" religion is one which
takes morality (or some form of reason) as its sole basis, rejecting the need
for any special aid from revelation. In truly Critical fashion, Kant
rejects both extremes (the former being too dogmatic, the latter being too sceptical) in favor of a more moderate view which combines
them, forming the idea of an empirical religion which accepts the possibility
of both natural religion (objectively) and revealed religion (subjectively).
Only if objective priority is given to the former (i.e., only if it is not a
"learned" religion), can an empirical religion be considered as a
candidate for a truly universal religion.
Kant lends further support to this interpretation in LE (83-84)
when he explains that "supernatural religion is not opposed to natural
religion, but completes it. Natural religion is true but
incomplete." It is incomplete because "true religion" is only
inner, yet usually involves some outward
expression:
...there is no
such thing as an outer religion. All [true] religion is entirely a matter
of disposition; all outward action is either a means to or an expression of the
religion within us: no outward act can be a religious act; acts of
religion are within us, because true religion is purely a matter of
disposition. [LE (82-83), emphasis added]
Kant is here emphasizing the radically pure, or transcendental character of his
special Critical perspective on religion: just as the first Critique
lays the transcendental foundation for empirical knowledge and the second Critique
lays the transcendental foundation for moral action, so also RBBR
lays the transcendental foundation for real (empirical) religion.
However, the fact that the inner disposition must be primary does
not mean that it can stand on its own. On the contrary, only the
empirical religion which combines the outer and the inner in the
proper way can be a universal religion. Accordingly, Kant leaves no doubt
as to his position on the inadequacy of a merely inner religion
in LE (102):
A pure
religion...consist[s] solely in dispositions which are directed towards God and
imply morality. A mixed religion, in so far as it appeals to the senses,
is one which is merely a means to morality. But as man is sensuous and
the religious appeal to the senses has its uses, it can be said that man can
have no pure religion.
This explains why, in spite of his emphasis on the
primacy of true "inner" religion, Kant does not use the phrase "reinen Vernunft"
in the title of RBBR.
Once Kant's perspectival distinction between
theology, morality and religion is clearly understood, his insistence that
morality is the primary basis of religion, while theology is secondary,
can be recognized as a rather straightforward application of his insistence on
the "primacy of practical reason" in general: in Kant's System
practical action always takes precedence over theoretical beliefs.[17] This is why he rejects all
theoretical arguments for the existence of God, yet claims that his moral
argument is "the only one needful for religion" [CJ
474], so that "the only theology of reason which is possible is one that
is based upon moral laws" [664]. However, it is a grave mistake to
include Kant's moral argument for the existence of God as part of his theory of
religion, as is so often done when the latter is viewed as a mere footnote to his
moral philosophy [see notes 3 and 4 above]. Not only does he never repeat
the moral argument as such in RBBR, but he clearly goes beyond
the mere possibility of God which it guarantees [see e.g., note
24 below]. The faith which is the proper domain of theology
is added to the knowledge which arises out of our moral nature in
order to give rise to religion, in which the reality of God plays
a role it never could in the moral system on its own. And the result is
that the ultimate fulfilment of the moral law itself
becomes possible: "In religion all our morality ought to reach its fulfilment in respect of its object" [LE
(78-79)].
This perspectival interpretation of Kant's definition
of religion puts it in a new light. When Kant says religion is the
recognition of duties as divine commands, he is not secretly
thinking "But we enlightened folks all know that they are actually nothing
but human duties in disguise." Rather, he is implying that the only
way to make sense out of man's universal experience of inwardly
compelling duty, and the only way to imagine how the enormous task it presents
to us can be fulfilled, given the factual reality of "radical evil in
human nature" [RBBR 19-44(15-39)], is to view these duties as if
they are commanded by God Himself (though, of course, this can never be a
matter of theoretical knowledge). This is why he says we must view
our duties as divine (not just human) commands: we must
view them as being connected (via the moral law within us) to a higher Power
outside us (though not outside Reason, lest they be heteronomous)
or we will never be able to achieve their fulfilment.
This fulfilment, according to Kant, is the heart and
the hope of true religion.[18]
III. An Outline of Kant's System of Religion
If the foregoing interpretation is correct, then the usual assumption, that RBBR
simply restates and expands the essentials of Kant's theory of morality in the
second Critique, is clearly mistaken. Instead, RBBR
ought to be viewed as itself a kind of transcendental Critique of
Religion--i.e., as an attempt to delineate the boundary
between true religion and false religion by setting forth the necessary
conditions for the possibility of religious experience. And this
is, indeed, precisely what Kant does. When he explains this in the
Preface to the second edition of RBBR, he adds that his
experiment will actually be twofold: first, to discover the rational
conditions for the possibility of religion; and second to test one particular
religious faith, viz. Christianity, to see how closely it conforms to these
conditions. Assessing the success of the latter experiment would be too
complex a task to attempt here. Kant's exposition is clear enough,
however, so that a general look at the former will enable us to determine more
precisely the extent to which Kant's rational system of religion is or is not
reductive.
RBBR is divided into four "Books", each of which
develops one "stage" (as I shall call it) in Kant's systematic
exposition of the nature of religion. The primary task of the first stage
is to answer the question: Is human nature originally good or evil?
Kant's answer is (as usual) that it depends on the perspective from which the
question is asked. If the question refers to the potential
which resides in every human being as a "living" (animal),
"rational" (human) and "accountable" (personal) being, then
we must regard human nature as originally good, because these characteristics
naturally "enjoin the observance of the [moral] law" [RBBR
26-28(21-23)]. However, if the question refers to the actual
state of every human person in their first (and subsequent) moral act(s), then
we cannot avoid the conclusion that an original ("radical") evil
exists in human nature. This conclusion is necessary not only if we base
our judgment on "what we know of man through experience" [32(27)]; in
addition, "it must be apprehended a priori through the
concept of evil" [35(31)]. Thus, Kant concludes, "we may
presuppose evil to be subjectively necessary to every man, even the best"
[32(27)].
Kant's argument in stage one has not always been appreciated by his critics,
who would rather gloss over it in order to emphasize the "good bits"
(i.e., the bits about morality).[19]
Yet this two-sided answer to the question of human nature is as crucial to
Kant's theory of religion as freedom is to his theory of morality, and as time
and space are to his theory of knowledge. Kant is arguing that religion
itself would not be possible if it were not true that human nature contains
within it an intrinsically good purpose, and that the same human nature is
nevertheless infected with an irresistible tendency towards evil. This
tension sets the problem which all religion tries to solve. So, without
these two conditions, religion would never have appeared. Evil is necessary
to every man, and that is why morality alone is insufficient. If evil
were not necessary, then we could realize the goal of becoming well-pleasing to
God merely by remaining in the pure (moral) part of Kant's System. But in his
religious system Kant insists right at the outset that we must recognize our
inability to reach the goal in this way: we need more than mere morality,
because nobody is perfect. We are all corrupted by radical evil.
The second stage in Kant's religious system responds to the initial limiting
conditions set out in stage one by examining "the conflict of the good
with the evil principle for sovereignty over man" [RBBR
57(50)]. The question Kant is trying to answer in Book Two is: How
can an evil person become good? The answer
which interpreters have traditionally assumed Kant to be giving is that man
becomes good by acting in a good way, by obeying the moral law. This,
once again, is a subtle misconstrual of the solution
Kant actually offers. How does an evil heart become a good heart?
Kant summarizes his answer in RBBR 45-47(40-3):
For despite
the fall, the injunction that we ought to become better men
resounds unabatedly in our souls; hence this must be within our power, even
though what we are able to do is in itself inadequate and though
we thereby only render ourselves susceptible of higher, and for us inscrutable,
assistance.... But if a man is to become not merely legally,
but morally, a good man (pleasing to God), ...this
cannot be brought about through gradual reformation so long as
the basis of the maxims [i.e., the "heart"] remains impure, but must
be effected through a revolution in the man's
disposition... He can become a new man only by a kind of rebirth, as it were a new creation..., and a change of heart.
Kant is here making two main points. The first is that, no matter how
good we are, we cannot be good enough to please God (i.e., to fulfil the moral law) in every one of our actions.
"What we are able to do is in itself inadequate"! Then what is
the importance of morality at all? Kant says that by acting morally we render
ourselves susceptible of "higher and, for us [i.e., for bare
reason] inscrutable assistance". Another way of saying the same
thing is that grace is a necessary condition of becoming good.
Kant supports this position explicitly in RBBR 75-76(70):[20]
Here, then, is
that surplus...over and above the profit from good works, and it is itself a
profit which is reckoned to us by grace. That what in our
earthly life...is ever only a becoming (namely, becoming a man
well-pleasing to God) should be credited to us exactly as if we were already in
full possession of it--to this we have no legal claim... Thus the decree
is always one of grace alone...
Such a manifestation of grace occurs as a part of
the conversion experience of the religious believer: even though we are
not fully good, we are regarded as good by
God. Kant almost seems to be defending the Lutheran position that man is
saved by grace alone, not by works! This is slightly
misleading, however, because he does not actually say "not by works";
rather, he says both works and grace are necessary. Good works are
necessary from the moral perspective of practical reason; and grace is
necessary from the non-moral perspective of theoretical reason. Kant's
view is that, if salvation is going to happen, both of these requirements must
be met.
The question this raises is: What is the proper order?
From one point of view, grace must come first, because there is no way a person
can erase the evil deeds he or she has already done, and evil is the first
moral action performed by every person. God must take the
initiative. But how does this happen? Kant says bare reason cannot
answer this question. All we can do is to recognize the space
left open by reason, which needs to be filled. Filling this space is not
an optional extra, intended only for those who need a crutch; rather, it must
be filled in some way by God's grace if man is to become well-pleasing to
God. Naked reason cannot tell us the exact way in which this will
happen. Only faith, as a complement to the inadequacy of our theoretical
reason, can pave the way for such a disclosure.
Kant's theory of this "space" is expressed primarily in terms of what
he calls the "archetype of perfect humanity". The grace of God,
from the point of view of bare reason, can only be regarded as an
archetype. By "archetype" Kant means that every human being has
a kind of inner "space", ready and waiting to be filled by the grace
of God. But nothing in our reason can guarantee
the actual filling of that space. The problem, Kant says, is that we are
not able to see clearly into the depths of the human heart--not even our own
heart. So there is no way we can know for sure whether or not God has actually
manifested his grace to us, or whether we have accepted it completely [see e.g.
RBBR 51(46), 67-69(61-62)]. We cannot tell for sure whether
or not the "space" we have in our reason has actually been
filled. So what can we do? Kant says what we must do
is to adopt what he calls "practical faith".
In a nutshell, Kant's notion of practical faith says this: Try your best,
and trust that God will do the rest. That is, do your moral duty as often
as you can, follow the moral law in your heart, but never fool yourself into
believing that this alone will save you, because you will always fall
short. Kant stresses this idea time after time;[21] and yet, whenever he says it, strict reductionist interpreters sweep his comments off to one
side and surmise "Well, he must have been trying to please the
governmental authorities of the established church, who were threatening to
censor his work. He couldn't have believed that!"[22] Yet this kind of selective
interpretation is unjustified, particularly at this point, where he is
expounding the very heart of his entire philosophical System.
We can therefore summarize Kant's argument in stage two as follows. Kant is
saying that, although we can never make ourselves worthy to be accepted
by God, we can make ourselves worthy to be made acceptable
by God. This is the proper relationship, according to Kant, between good works
and grace.[23]
Doing good works--trying to live a good life--is the rational basis upon which
we can conceive of ourselves as having received God's grace. For our moral
action is based on the same disposition through which we open ourselves up to
the possibility of having our immoral deeds covered up by God.
Up until this point Kant's religious system has been concerned only with the
salvation of the individual believer. But in stage three he argues that
"the victory of the good over the evil principle, and the founding of a
kingdom of God on earth" [RBBR 93(85)] can occur only in the
context of a community. Therefore, the questions to be
answered in Book Three all revolve around the issue of the nature and
justification of such a community, regarded as a necessarily religious
institution. Why do we need such a community? Because when a converted person
lives in close proximity to other people--even if these others are also trying
to live good lives--they will inevitably have a corrupting influence on each
other. The radical evil in their nature as human beings will still
corrupt the goodness of the individual's deeds [RBBR
93-94(85-86)]. (Presumably Kant is thinking here of inter-personal
conflicts such as jealousy, selfishness, etc.) For this reason, people
seeking to live a good life need to join together in the form of what Kant
calls an "ethical commonwealth". In other words, we need to
come together and make an agreement to cooperate, based on moral laws
[95-98(87-89)].
The strict reductionist interpretation of Kant stops
at this point: it says the ethical commonwealth is Kant's description of
how the unity of pure moral religion can come about. But Kant himself
actually says the ethical commonwealth on its own is an insufficient
basis for the realization of true religion. Why? Because the people
who unite together in this way must work according to the additional
assumption that the same Being, or the same Source, is
at the root of their internally prescribed moral commands. And the only
way to believe this is to believe there is a God who guides all of the members
of such a group together.[24]
On this basis Kant concludes that the ethical commonwealth will work only when
it is viewed as an invisible "People of God" who come together under
the idea of a church, each member of which receives in his or her
own heart individual guidance from God. Ultimately, the level of cooperation
between the people joined together in such a community will therefore be
determined by the extent to which each person receives guidance from the same
Absolute Being. Nevertheless, this need to rely on God for the final
realization of man's highest good does not release man from
responsibility. On the contrary, Kant stresses in RBBR
100-102(91-93) that the true church must have a definite (archetypal) form
through "human organization", following (like
everything transcendental) the pattern of the categories:
To found a
moral people of God is...a task whose consummation can be looked for not
from men but only from God Himself [emphasis added]. Yet
man...must proceed as though everything depended upon him... The true
(visible) church is that which exhibits the (moral) kingdom of God on earth so
far as it can be brought to pass by men. The requirements...are the following:
1. Universality, and hence its numerical oneness;
... 2. Its nature (quality), i.e., purity,
union under no motivating forces other than moral ones...
3. Its relation under the principle of freedom;
... 4. Its modality, the unchangeableness
of its constitution...
Kant concludes his system of religion in stage four by asking how we can
determine whether or not a particular example of empirical religion is
genuine. In order to distinguish between false religion and true
religion, he offers the following principle:
I take the
following proposition to be a principle requiring no proof: Whatever,
over and above good life-conduct, man fancies that he can do to become
well-pleasing to God is mere religious illusion and pseudo-service of God.
I say, what man believes that he can do; for here it is
not denied that beyond all that we can do there may be something
in the mysteries of the highest wisdom thatGod alone cando totransform us into men
well-pleasing to Him.... But is there not also perhaps a dizzying illusion
of virtue...? No! The disposition of virtue occupies itself
with something real which of itself is well-pleasing to God and
which harmonizes with the world's highest good. True, an illusion of
self-sufficiency may attach itself thereto, anillusion
of regarding oneself as measuring up to the idea of one's holy duty; but this
is merely contingent." [RBBR 170-173(158-161)]
Traditionally, passages such as this have been
interpreted along the lines of strict (eliminative) reductionism: Kant is
believed to be saying that nothing besides morality counts, so we can throw
away everything else. But this is not what he says! On the
contrary, he explicitly states that we can never hope to behave well enough to
"measure up" completely to the required standard. He is arguing
that anything completely detached from morality is not part of
true religion. Nevertheless, elsewhere in Book IV he explains that there
is a proper place for non-moral aspects of religion, for things in our
empirical religion which are related to faith, but are not in
themselves morally good or bad. These do have a proper place as long as
we keep them attached to morality, as long as there is a definite
connection between such non-moral religious activities or beliefs and the moral
core of religion. Thus Kant's principle entails that non-moral religious
activity can be a legitimate part of the true (universal) religion only if it
serves as a means for deepening or quickening a person's moral disposition.
The error against which Kant's principle is protecting is not that of admitting
non-moral aspects into an empirical religion; rather it is that of reversing
the priority of the moral over the non-moral, by viewing the latter not merely
as means to a moral end, but as themselves the objective condition for God's
acceptance.
Hence whoever
assigns priority to obedience to statutory laws, requiring a revelation, as
being necessary to religion, and regards this obedience not merely as a means
to the moral disposition but as the objective condition of becoming
immediately well-pleasing to God, and whoever thus places endeavor toward a good
course of life below this historical faith (instead of requiring the latter,
which can be well-pleasing to God only conditionally, to adapt
itself to the former, which alone is intrinsically well-pleasing
to Him)--whoever does this transforms the service of God into a mere fetishism
and practises a pseudo-service which is subversive to
all endeavors toward true religion. So much depends, when we wish to
unite two good things, upon the order in which they are united! True enlightenment
lies in this very distinction; therein the service of God becomes first and
foremost a free and hence a moral service." [RBBR
178-179(166-167)]
Here Kant is not equating non-moral activities to
false religion, and moral activities to true religion, as the strict reductionist interpretation would have it. Rather,
he is describing true religion as the combination of these two
elements in their proper order. From our point of view as
human beings, morality is the first basis, the foundation of our building of
religion, whereas faith and non-moral religious activities constitute the
building itself. False religion is the belief that some
theoretical (i.e., non-moral) belief or idea is the basis, the
foundation, and that morality just comes as a kind of extra, second thing--or
maybe even not at all. But if the priorities are right, then both the
moral and the non-moral can cooperate as proper elements in true religion.
IV. Conclusion: Raising Morality to the
Status of Religion
This more balanced way of interpreting Kant's intentions enables us to make an
accurate evaluation of the extent to which his two experiments are
successful. I believe both are far more successful than the traditional
myth would lead us to believe. Unfortunately, an account of how Kant
carries out his first experiment by arguing for the the
details of the four stages in his system of religion, and of how
he carries out his second experiment by relating his theory to the Christian
religion as a test case, is far beyond the scope of this article. My own
conclusion, after carrying out such a detailed study of RBBR [see
note 11], is that the answers Kant gives to the wide range of questions which
occupy his attention in RBBR go far beyond the simple idea that
religion is just morality in disguise.
A brief look at three issues of special importance can serve as a tantalizing preview
of the implications of the perspectival interpretation
of Kant's religious system outlined in section III. Kant's views
concerning the divinity of Jesus, the efficacy of prayer, and the authority of
the Bible as a divine revelation have typically been taken to be contrary, if
not hostile, to the traditional Christian doctrines. Although Kant
certainly does not defend the orthodox views, the strict reductionist interpretation has blinded many readers to the
fact that he also does not deny the validity of such doctrines,
but rather offers a new, more moderate explanation of their
validity. In each case, his explanations of such doctrines promote (what
I call) a kind of "liberating conservatism" and "conserving
liberalism" (in opposition of the usual extremes of an exclusively
conservative or liberal interpretations of Christian doctrine).
Thus, a careful examination of the first issue reveals that Kant never denies
Jesus' divinity. On the contrary, he explicitly requires that this
question be left open, to be decided by faith, not bare reason [RBBR
63-64(57-58)]; nevertheless, he clearly outlines a "space" for such a
divine nature in his theory of the "personified idea [i.e. the
"archetype"] of the good principle" in man [60-62(57-58)], and
he even hints that Jesus' divinity could be interpreted in terms of his
"disposition", in which "the ideal of goodness" was
"displayed incarnate" [65-66(59); see also 128-29(119-20)].
Kant's criticism of the traditional view is directed primarily to those who
emphasize Jesus' divinity to such an extent that his humanity (and thus his
ability to serve as an example to all mankind) is neglected [63-64(57-58)]; but
he also guards against the opposite extreme of dogmatically denying Jesus'
divinity altogether.
Likewise, Kant never claims that prayer is merely an ineffective illusion which
should be eliminated from true religion. On the contrary, he insists that
the true "spirit" of prayer lies at the very heart of all true
religion; for prayer serves to "fan into flames the cinders of morality in
the inner recesses of the heart" [LE 99]. His
criticism of prayer as it is commonly practiced is that an emphasis on the
"letter" (i.e., on the words that are the uttered) can
often lead a person to hold the false belief that the uttering of such words
is, in itself, pleasing to God [RBBR 194-98(182-86)]. All
non-moral religious activities are treated in a similar way: they lead to
false religion only if regarded as a direct way of serving God
[103-106(94-97)]; if they are treated as an indirect type of
service, intended "to induce in us a moral disposition" [LE
99], then they are not only valid, but can be vital to true religion [RBBR
192(180-81)].
Finally, Kant never intends to deny the reliability of the Bible as a divinely
revealed guideline for the faith and practice of the true Church. On the
contrary, he stresses that some text is necessary, and that this
text (i.e., the Bible) has proven its value by repeatedly serving as a vehicle
for awakening man to true religion [RBBR 106-107(97-98)];
moreover, he carefully explains how its moral content can assure us of its
divinely revealed character [112(102-103)]. His criticism of the common
belief in divine revelation is directed mainly against those who regard
rational belief in the theology contained in a particular book as
the necessary condition for pleasing God, so that "learning" and
"scholarship", rather than practical faith and good life-conduct,
inevitably come to be regarded as the most important elements in religion
[112-14(103-105)]. Although an exhaustive study of the way in which Kant
defends this and each of the above doctrines would reveal some clear
differences between his views and the views of both conservative
and liberal theologians, his position is nevertheless remarkably compatible
with that of many open-minded Christians.
Our general overview of RBBR has given us plenty of evidence for
concluding that Kant does insist on maintaining a necessary connection
between morality and religion, and in that loose, explanatory sense, he does
indeed reduce everything religious to the level of
morality. In other words, morality clearly is for Kant the pure (and
hence, necessary) core of all true religion. But as we have
seen time and time again, he does this because he recognizes that only if
morality is raised to the status of religion will it be able to fulfil its own goals! Far from requiring the elimination
of all non-moral elements, Kant's approach rather guarantees
their potential value by rooting them in the only human soil in which non-moral
religious beliefs and practices can grow and flourish.
Did Kant therefore reduce religion to morality? Perhaps the best way to
answer this question is with another question. Did Jesus and the
writers of the Bible reduce religion to morality?
Our answer to the latter question ought, I believe, to be the same as our
answer to the former. For Kant's view of religion is essentially the same
as, for example, the prophet who asks:[25]
With what
shall I come to the Lord and bow myself before the God on high? Shall I
come to Him with burnt offerings, with yearling calves? Does the Lord
take delight in thousands of rams, in ten thousand rivers of oil? Shall I
present my first-born for my rebellious acts, the fruit of my body for the sin
of my soul? He has told you, O man, what is good; and what does the
Lord require of you but to do justice, to love kindness, and to walk humbly
with your God?
Notes
to: Does Kant Reduce Religion to Morality?
[1] I am grateful
to an anonymous referee for suggesting the terms "explanatory" and
"eliminative", and for offering numerous criticisms of a previous
version of this paper, without which the present version would be considerably
less clear.
[2] Immanuel
Kant, Die Religion innerhalb der Grenzen der
blossen Vernunft
(1793), tr. T.M. Greene and H.H. Hudson as Religion within the Limits of
Reason Alone--hereafter RBBR--(New York: Harper &
Row, Publishers, 1960), p.153(142). References to Kant's works will cite
the Akademie page numbering. When
this number is not specified in the translation, the translation's pagination
will be added in brackets, as above. The only exception is Kant's Critique
of Pure Reason--hereafter CPR--tr. N. Kemp Smith (London:
Macmillan, 1929), references to which will cite the original pagination of the
second (B) edition. References to works which do not appear in the Akademie edition will specify only the
translator's pagination, in brackets.
[3] Ernst Cassirer, Kant's Life and Thought, tr. J.
Haden (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1981), pp.381-2,385
(emphasis added). C.C.J. Webb expresses the same idea more succinctly
when he describes Kant's theory of religion as "an appendix to
Ethics" [Kant's Philosophy of Religion (Oxford: The
Clarendon Press, 1926), p.62.
[4] Rem B. Edwards, Reason and Religion
(Washington D.C.: University Press of America, Inc., 1979), p.46
(emphasis added). Edwards bases his reductionist
summary of Kant's position only on the title of RBBR
and on Kant's definition of religion. Because he assumes
that Kant "shared with the rationalists of his century the conviction that
reason alone is sufficient for all religious knowledge", he infers that,
because Kant regards morality as "the essence of 'true religion'", it
must also be true that "nothing else really matters" for Kant
[p.46]. As a result, he concludes his discussion with a (completely
unjustified) summary of Kant's view which implies that it should be relegated
to the scrap heap: "With a mere definition of religion
Kant believes he has shown that no 'true religion' contains a belief that God
really exists..., that no 'true religion' contains a reliable and
self-authenticating revelation, and that no 'true religion' makes a place for
prayer, ritual, or any other expression of unique duties to God"
[p.52]. Not only does Edwards fail to recognize that, as we shall see in
section III, Kant does preserve a necessary space for such
elements in all true religion, but he also completely ignores the fact that
Kant supports each of his claims with arguments (not mere definitions)
[see note 18 below].
Another typical example of a
blatantly reductionist interpretation of Kant's
theory of religion is given by Kwan Tze-wan in
"Kant's 'Humanistic' Conception of Religion", Tunghai
Journal 24 (June 1983), pp.95-118. Kwan repeatedly adds words
like "nothing but", "only", or "just" to Kant's
own words to make them appear to defend eliminative reductionism [see
especially pp. 110-111], when nothing in Kant's text indicates that this is his
intention. Kwan sets up an absolute dichotomy between an historical fact and
its symbolic meaning, as if no event could be both at once! Thus, in
discussing the "symbolic meaning" of Kant's idea of "Christus", he says "God or Christus...is
just a human fiction, a projection, an idea or an Ideal" [p.111]. He
concludes by saying that for Kant "No God will tell us if we are really
on our way toward a pure rational faith... Only the
human conscience" [p.112]. But this misses Kant's point,
which, as we shall see, is that God tells us through such
rational channels as the conscience.
[5] Prolegomena
to Any Future Metaphysics, tr. L.W. Beck (New York: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, Inc., 1950), p.352. The
English words "limit" and "boundary" have a similar
connotation, especially in light of the mathematical use of the word "limit".
[6] Another
possibility would be "unaided", since "blossen
Vernunft" does indicate that Kant wishes to
examine the rational nature of religion unaided by divine
revelation. However, this choice is less literal, and considerably less
colorful than "bare". Kant was very fond of such, often rather
fanciful, metaphors, so a good translation should convey this fanciful nuance
as faithfully as possible.
[7] RBBR
123n(113n),135n(126n); see also The Conflict of
the Faculties [hereafter CF], tr. M.J. Gregor (New York: Abaris,
1979), pp.36-37.
[8] In Critique
of Judgment [hereafter CJ], tr. J.C. Meredith (Oxford:
The Clarendon Press, 1952), p.435, Kant says "man is the final end of
creation."
[9] Immanuel
Kant, Lectures on Ethics [hereafter LE], tr. L.
Infield (London: Methuen & Co. Ltd., 1979), p.(81).
[10] The first two
questions are "What can I know?" and "What ought I to do?"
[CPR 832-833]. Elsewhere Kant adds that all three questions
can be summed up in a fourth question, "What is man?" [See his Logic,
tr. R. Hartman and W. Schwarz (New York: Bobbs-Merrill
Company, Inc., 1974), p.25(29)].
[11] Clearly, the
questions relating to man's hope are associated much more
naturally with religion than with aesthetics or teleology (the subjects of the
third Critique). Moreover, RBBR fits more
closely than the third Critique does into the systematic patterns
established in the first two Critiques [see ch.11 of my
forthcoming book, Kant's System of Perspectives].
[12] Immanuel
Kant, Lectures on Education [hereafter LEd],
tr. E.F. Buchner as "Lecture-Notes on
Pedagogy" in The Educational Theory of Immanuel Kant
(London: J.B. Lippincott Company, 1908), p.494(214). See also LE (81):
"Religion is the application of the moral laws to the knowledge of God,
and not the origin of morals.... All religion assumes morality, and
morality cannot, therefore, be derived from religion."
[13] Immanuel Kant,
Lectures on Philosophical Theology, tr. A.W. Wood and G.M. Clark
(London: Cornell University Press, 1978), p.(26).
[14] CJ 481. Kant makes a similar remark in LE
(78-79): "Religion is morality applied to God. It is ethics
applied to theology.... Accordingly, religion is the combination of
ethics and theology..." However, he insists in LEd
493(211) that, even though "the concepts of religion always presuppose a
theology", in religious education "one must not begin with
theology.... Morality must precede, theology follow, and then we have
religion" [494-95(215)]. Thus there is a strict parallel between
morality and theology in their relation to religion: Kant explains in CF
36 that "theology" is "the sum of certain teachings regarded as
divine revelation", whereas "religion" is "the sum of all
our duties regarded as divine commands".
[15] The quoted
text comes from RBBR 153-54(142-43). However, the same
definition of religion can be found in the first Critique [CPR
846-47], the second Critique [p.129], and the third Critique
[CJ 481], as well as in RBBR 103-4(95) and CF
36. Likewise, in RBBR 110(100) Kant says "the performance
of all human duties as divine commands...constitutes the essence of all
religion."
[16] That pure
rationalism is Kant's position is further suggested by the fact that he
repeatedly refers to his own task as that of discerning the nature of the
"religion of pure reason" [see e.g., RBBR
110(100)]. Moreover, Kant "recognizes revelation" in the sense
that he devotes a whole section of Book Three [109-114(100-105)] to the task of
discerning the "authentic" principle for interpreting any document
which purports to be revealed by God.
[17] See Critique
of Practical Reason, pp.119-121.
[18] Edwards [see
note 4] argues that Kant's definition of religion renders invalid everything
else he says about religion simply because it is a "persuasive"
definition (i.e., one which merely stipulates the "true" or
"real" character of something in order to alter, weaken, or reinforce
some "attitudes and values" [Reason and Religion,
p.42]). As a result, Edwards completely ignores the fact that RBBR
is filled with arguments to support Kant's many claims, and that
Kant presents his official definition not at the beginning of his exposition,
but near the end! Moreover, the definition of a "persuasive"
definition, which Edwards borrows from Charles Stevenson [Language and
Ethics (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1944), p.210],
is itself a persuasive definition, since Edwards uses it to cast
doubt upon the legitimacy of such definitions, and to divert our attention to true
(i.e., "descriptive") definitions. So this distinction between
types of definition ends up casting doubt upon its own validity (at least, as
long as one believes, with Edwards, that the only "true" definition
is a descriptive one)! For Kant, by contrast, to allow only
descriptive definitions into the philosophy of religion would be tantamount to
giving up everything distinctively philosophical in this discipline. What
Edwards ignores is that a transcendental definition can be
non-descriptive without being "emotive".
[19] Ernst Cassirer discusses the negative reaction to Kant's doctrine
of radical evil by his contemporaries in Kant's Life and Thought
[see note 3], pp.391-92. He explains, for example, that
"Goethe...remarked bitterly in a letter to Herder that Kant has
disgracefully 'slobbered on' his philosopher's cloak 'with the blot of radical
evil, so that even Christ would be enticed to kiss its hem'."
[20] Anyone who
believes Kant is merely preaching a religion of good works must answer to his
clear statements to the contrary, such as can be found in this and numerous
other RBBR passages!
[21] See e.g. RBBR
45(40-41), 52(47), 67n(61n), 71-76(65-71), 97-98(89),
100-101(92), 116-120(106-111), 171-72(159-60), 173(161).
[22] RBBR
was published just as the new king (Frederick William II) was tightening his
grip on academia through a program of strict religious censorship. The idea of
some interpreters, that in RBBR Kant sometimes softens his real
views, or writes with a twist of irony, in hopes of appeasing the authorities,
is not only an unfounded insult to Kant's integrity, but would also indicate a
profound inability on Kant's part to judge what would actually offend the
authorities! For Kant was severely reprimanded for the views he expressed
in RBBR, which were interpreted as being subversive to the
established Church's interpretation of Christianity. He responded by
loyally promising the king he would never again publish or speak publicly on
the subject of religion during his reign. After the king's death, he promptly
resumed his public stance on religion, since his vow referred only to his duty
as a servant of that particular king--a fortunate decision indeed for
posterity, since CF provides an invaluable inside look at Kant's
own understanding of how RBBR ought to be interpreted. He
explains and defends this decision in CF 5-11, and includes an
explicit statement [CF 9-10] indicating the seriousness with
which he composed his writings: "I always pictured this judge [viz.,
the voice of God speaking through the conscience] as standing at my side to
keep me not only from error that corrupts the soul, but even from any careless
expression that might give offense."
[23] Kant himself
actually provides in RBBR 115-20(106-11) a compelling solution to
the traditional problem of the conflict between faith and works. As we
shall see, he distinguishes in stage four between truly good
works (i.e., morally good actions) and works which are wrongly believed
to be good because they are done solely on God's behalf [see e.g. RBBR
106(97)]. Kant's response to Luther would have been to say he was right
for rejecting the Catholic church's belief that works of the latter type (i.e.,
churchly activities) could be in themselves salvific,
but wrong to "throw out the baby with the bathwater" by also
rejecting the necessity of truly moral deeds. From man's point of view,
the latter provide the proper basis for our hope in salvation,
even though, with Luther, Kant agrees that they could never be sufficient from God's
point of view [cf. note 21]. Thus, the conflict between truly
good works and true faith is only apparent, once we recognize
their perspectival relationship [RBBR
119(110)]: they "are not two principles which in themselves so
differ that to begin with the one, or the other, would be to enter upon
opposing paths, but only one and the same practical idea...representing the
archetype now as found in God and proceeding from Him [to which man responds
with faith as the basis for good works], and now, as found in us [to which man
responds with good works as the basis for faith], but in both instances as the
gauge for our course of life. The antinomy is only apparent, since...it
regards the self-same practical idea, taken merely in different references
[i.e., from different perspectives], as two different principles."
[24] This
argument, found in RBBR 97-100(89-91), can be regarded as a kind
of "religious proof" for the existence of God. Kant's argument can
be paraphrased as follows: (1) it is a duty of the human race towards
itself to promote the highest good; (2) no individual can achieve this goal
alone; (3) therefore an ethical commonwealth is necessary; (4) in
order to be ethical, the legislation binding the members together
must be internal (not political); (5) we cannot see how it could
be within man's power to unite the disposition of all people into
such a whole; (6) anything the moral law commands must be possible to realize;
(7) therefore, it is necessary to presuppose the idea "of a higher moral
Being through whose universal dispensation the forces of separate individuals,
insufficient in themselves, are united for a common end" [98(89)].
[25] Micah 6:6-8.
Quoted from New American Standard Bible (Carol
Stream, Ill.: Creation House, Inc., 1960).
This etext is based on a prepublication draft
of the published version of this essay.
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