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Intro
‎Contents
‎Acknowledgements
‎References and Abbreviations
‎Introduction
‎Part I. Three Views of Marxism's Relation to Kant's Ethics
‎Introduction to Part I
‎Chapter 1. Against the Irrelevance View
‎1. The Instrumental Reasons Argument
‎2. The False Claims Argument
‎3. The Ideology Argument
‎4. The Class Interests Argument
‎5. Summary
‎Chapter 2. Against the Complementarity View, Part 1: Socialist Strategy
‎1. The Complementarity View: Stammler, Staudinger, Vorländer
‎2. An Objection to the Complementarity View
‎3. The Deficient Self-Understanding Claim: A Critique
‎Chapter 3. Against the Complementarity View, Part 2: Can Kant's Formula of the End in Itself Condemn Capitalism?
‎1. FEI-Based Arguments against Capitalism
‎2. Kant's Never Merely as a Means Principle
‎3. Applying FEI: Some General Considerations
‎4. Applying FEI beyond Kant
‎5. Evaluation of the Arguments
‎6. FEI and General Injustice
‎7. Conclusion
‎Chapter 4. Against the Incompatibility View
‎1. Two Components of Human Freedom
‎2. Marx on Human Freedom
‎3. The True Realm of Freedom and the Realm of Necessity
‎4. The Link to Autonomy
‎5. Marx on the Autonomy of a Human Community
‎6. Marx's Commitment to a Critique of Kant's Ethics
‎7. Summary
‎Part II. A Critique of Kant's Ethics
‎Introduction to Part II
‎Chapter 5. Kant's Contradiction in Conception Test
‎1. The Basic Features of the Causal-Teleological Version of LCI
‎2. Further Features of a Causal-Teleological Version of LCI
‎3. The Suicide Maxim
‎4. The False Promising Maxim
‎5. Summary
‎Chapter 6. Kant's Contradiction in the Will Test
‎1. Assessment Criteria
‎2. Assessing the Existing Interpretations
‎3. The Extravagant Imperfect Nature Interpretation.

‎4. Formulating the Groundwork's Two Maxims
‎5. The Maxim of Neglecting Natural Gifts
‎6. The Maxim of Refusing to Help
‎7. Summary
‎Chapter 7. The Principle of Suitability Interpretation of Kant's Formula of the Law of Nature
‎1. The Contradiction in Conception Test
‎2. The Contradiction in the Will Test
‎Chapter 8. Kant's Argument for the Formula of the End in Itself
‎1. The Structure of Kant's Argument for FEI
‎2. Steps 1-3
‎3. Step 4: The Logical Pluralism Version of Kant's Regressive Argument
‎4. Advantages of the Logical Pluralism Version of Kant's Regressive Argument
‎5. Humanity, Personality and a Belief in the Existence of God
‎Chapter 9. Kant's Arguments for a Belief in the Existence of God
‎1. Kant's Concept of the Highest Good
‎2. The Argument from the Highest Good
‎3. Wood's Version of the Argument from the Highest Good
‎4. The Objection from Moral Happiness
‎5. The Physicoteleological Argument
‎6. Conclusion
‎Part III. Founding a Post-Kantian Ethics
‎Introduction to Part III
‎Chapter 10. A Marxist Argument for Autonomy
‎1. Relativising Practical Reason
‎2. An Argumentative Strategy
‎3. The Need for a Duty to the Whole
‎4. The General Features of a Foundational Argument
‎5. A Lesson from Mill's 'Proof'
‎6. The Distinctive Features of a Marxist Foundational Argument
‎7. A Simple Account of Capitalism's Basic Structure
‎8. Explaining the Premises
‎9. The Rights-Antinomy
‎10. Resolving the Rights-Antinomy
‎11. The System Universalisability Principle of Justice
‎12. The Autonomy of a Human Community
‎13. Summary
‎14. The Justification of Socialist Strategy
‎15. Conclusion
‎Bibliography
‎Index.

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