Exact(27)
Yet her comparison, in a well-known paper (Morality As a System of Hypothetical Imperatives, 1972) between Immanuel Kant's view of moral law as "inescapable" in some special way, and the demands of etiquette, was intended to argue that people who follow either morality or etiquette without questioning them "are relying on an illusion, as if trying to give the moral 'ought' a magic force".
Teufel (2011) reads the two theses as hypothetical imperatives, imposed upon reflective judgment by practical reason.
Corresponding to material principles, on Kant's view, are what he calls hypothetical imperatives.
Let's now turn to Kant's explanation of the normative authority of hypothetical imperatives.
At nearly the same level of generality is the principle underlying all "hypothetical imperatives".
Finally, Kant's examples come on the heels of defending the position that rationality requires conformity to hypothetical imperatives.
Similar(33)
For Kant the moral law is a categorical, not a hypothetical, imperative.
This, for example, is a hypothetical imperative: if you want coffee, then go to the cafe.
But not any command in this form counts as a hypothetical imperative in Kant's sense.
A hypothetical imperative is thus a command in a conditional form.
This hypothetical imperative applies to you only if you desire coffee and choose to gratify that desire.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com