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The son of a saddler in Königsberg, East Prussia, Immanuel’s
parents were persuaded by their pastor to enter him into the
local church school at the age of eight. He went on to study
at the University of Königsberg at Bachelors and, after a
period working as a tutor, Masters levels.
In 1770 Kant was appointed Professor of Logic and Metaphysics
at the university when he widened his interests from the natural
sciences to philosophy. His work sought to find a way between
the two philosophical polarities at the time, Rationalism
(with its focus on reason) and Empiricism (which focused
on experience).
Kant attempted to generate morality from a foundation of
reason, rather than from religion or custom and practice.
He thought the test of morality was whether it applied to
everyone. He argued that we should see whether the principles
that govern our actions could be universally applied. Kant
would argue that we could quickly appreciate the importance
of trust. If our moral principals allow us to break bonds
of trust then we should not expect others to honour such bonds
- in which case trust would simply be a word without any real
meaning.
Kant’s work was hugely influential, although it was slow
to spread due to the difficulty in translating his writing
from German, mainly due to his considerable use of technical
terms. He is widely acknowledged as the greatest philosopher
for three hundred years, and often ranked alongside Plato
and Aristotle
for importance within western philosophy.
A more detailed article on Kant's relevance to Trust can be
found by clicking here.
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