Kant: Punishment
Kant: Punishment, Shame, and Truthfulness
Kant’s moral pedagogy reaches the subjects most teachers wish they could avoid: when and how to punish, when shame is useful and when it harms, and why truthfulness is the foundation of everything else. Kant has a clear position on each.
When transgressions must be punished, why never in anger, and Kant’s five categories: negative, positive, physical, moral, and natural punishment
The distinction between the obedience of a child and the obedience of growing youth, and the place of inner freedom alongside duty
Why shame protects the love of honour, why it should not be used on young children, and the careful case for using it with lying youth
Why truthfulness is the essence of character, the parent’s job to break lying habits, and truth-telling as a perfect duty
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Last updated on • Talha