The ethical problem of Kant's cosmic peace

There is no hope that man seeks in our world and our time and longs for with passion, more than what he longs for in eternal and cosmic peace, a peace that would liberate the future of humanity from its greatest suffering resulting from the rapid development achieved by the deadly weapons industry,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: سمير بلكفيف
Format: Article
Language:Arabic
Published: Unviversity of Kufa, Faculty of Arts 2012-11-01
Series:آداب الكوفة
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.uokufa.edu.iq/index.php/kufa_arts/article/view/6328
Description
Summary:There is no hope that man seeks in our world and our time and longs for with passion, more than what he longs for in eternal and cosmic peace, a peace that would liberate the future of humanity from its greatest suffering resulting from the rapid development achieved by the deadly weapons industry, as it has become a threat to human existence at all. According to this forward-looking view in which the moral, civilized, and communicative dimension blends - and which is characterized by optimistic teleology - we find the German philosopher "Immanuel Kant" (1724-1804), and through his book "Towards Permanent Peace" he is keen on a human-global idea, through legislation For universal and eternal peace, stressing that the salvation of the human race lies in achieving the ultimate moral perfection for humanity, which is eternal peace.
ISSN:1994-8999
2664-469X