John Kant On The Enlightenment

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Empowering one’s self is the only way one can achieve enlightenment. We are all subject to authority and the law which determine how we should conduct ourselves. We follow the rules of what society imposes on us, but is their way necessarily the right way or the only way. We are subject to the laws of our society from generation to generation. Laws may have been modify throughout the ages but we all have to follow them. The enlightenment mostly spoke of those that holds a position in society. Kant appeal to one’s knowledge and conscience throughout the enlightenment. He states that a pastor is employed to preach the teachings and doctrines of the church and not from how he feels about it, (Kant, 1784). The pastor has to transfer these doctrines to his congregations without altering the information. Kant applied this to tax collectors and law enforcement also. Kant wrote this to open people minds to think outside the box as there are mostly minors in society that often cannot think for themselves. …show more content…
There was less opposition during his time of writing the enlightenment. People knowledge was not as advance as today. Kant wrote what is enlightenment in a time where most of society just accepted what was given to them. He referred to these people as minors. He also stated that mostly of these people go through life without becoming more than minors. Throughout the enlightenment Kant is saying people go through life, follow these rules that are pass from generation to generation, but is it necessarily right or we are just obligated to do what the authority says we should. In reading this document one has to ask the question was there freedom of expression throughout Kant time? There was either limited freedom of speech or none at all. People were not as open minded in the 1800s as they are