Friday, March 20, 2009 - 2:00pm
402 Claudia Cohen Hall
I consider Kant's notorious claim that it would be wrong to lie to a would-be murderer in order to conceal his intended victim. I argue that this position is not the product of any sort of pharisiacal rigorism, but instead reflects a deep tension in Kant's political philosophy. I then offer a way that Kant could have avoided this lunatic conclusion without abandoning the basic understanding of rights that seems to have driven him to it.