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settled in Hamburg where he entered a high school (most likely between 1783-85) and pursued studies to
improve his knowledge of math, science, and the German language. Matriculation records from a German
high school (a “Gymnasium”) list a Solomon Maimon among its pupils, so it is likely that Maimon began
referring to himself with this name and not “Shlomo ben Joshua” during this stay in Germany
It was after this period that Maimon began his philosophical writings. He moved from Hamburg to Breslau
(Wroclaw) and took up a position as a tutor with a family. He wrote several textbooks in Hebrew, one on
math and one concerned with Newton’s physics. He also translated Moses Mendelssohn’s Morgenstunden
into Hebrew. At the end of the decade, Maimon traveled to Berlin yet again. It was at this point that he
began his study of Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason. Kant’s friend, Marcus Herz, who was also a friend of
Maimon’s, sent Kant Maimon’s draft of a commentary on the first Critique. Kant had no intention of reading
through the commentary because he found himself too busy with other work. Yet, he later commented to
Herz that a brief look through Maimon’s manuscript showed him that Maimon had understood the first
Critique better than all of Kant’s other critics. With Kant’s “accolade” in hand, Maimon attained a legitimacy
that opened several doors and publishing avenues for him. Maimon revised the manuscript and published it
in 1790 as Versuch über die Transcendentalphilosophie, mit einem Anhang über die symbolische
Erkenntnis und Anmerkungen [Essay on Transcendental Philosophy with an Appendix on Symbolic
Knowledge, and Notes]. (Hereafter, this text will be cited as the “Versuch”)]. On the whole, the work is a set
of criticisms of Kant’s first Critique but it also interspersed with criticisms of or elaborations on Maimon’s
own commentary on Kant.. Between 1791 and 1800, Maimon went on to write nine other books and
numerous articles published in some of the more prominent German-language journals of the day. Maimon
lived in poverty for most of the early part of the 1790’s. For the last five years of his life, he was supported by
Adolf von Kalkreuth, a noble with considerable interest in philosophy. Maimon lived on von Kalkreuth's
estate near Glogow, in what is today southwestern Poland. Maimon died on 22 November 1800. Supposedly,
the Jewish citizens of Glogow disapproved of Maimon for not being a pious Jew and he was not allowed to
be buried within the Jewish cemetery.
Maimon claims that there were several phases to his philosophical development. The first – and perhaps
most important stage – was Maimon’s early encounter with Maimonides’ Guide to the Perplexed. It is
because of Maimonides that Maimon falls under the spell of rationalistic schools of thought. Not only does
Maimon obtain from Maimonides the idea that philosophy – and furthermore, human existence – should be
about the attainment of truth, but he also takes from Maimonides the belief that religion and its doctrines
must be consistent with philosophy. As will become evident from what is written below, many of the
doctrines to which Maimon professes can be traced back to Maimonides. Secondly, in his early visits to
Berlin, Maimon comes into contact with other, more recent thinkers also in the rationalistic tradition: the
Leibnizian-inspired philosopher Christian Wolff, Leibniz, and Spinoza. At that time in Germany, Spinoza
was seen as a very dangerous figure because the accepted view of his philosophy was that it necessarily led to
atheism. Maimon disagreed and had a significant respect for Spinoza. Finally, Maimon came upon Kant’s
Critique of Pure Reason in early 1787 and was awed by it. It was probably at this time that Maimon came
into contact with English empiricism, and Hume in particular. As will be discussed below, a very important
strand of Maimon’s thought is occupied with Humean skepticism. However, scholars differ as to whether or
not skepticism ends up being Maimon’s settled view.
It is difficult to summarize Maimon’s views given that none of his works is systematic and that his views
evolved somewhat over the 10 year period in which he was publishing his writings. In fact, it is this lack of
systematicity – as well as Maimon’s German, which at times is extremely unclear – that has contributed to
Maimon’s lack of recognition. Often his texts read like conglomerations of stream-of-consciousness
thoughts, albeit very perceptive ones. He does, however, give a clue about his philosophy as a whole when he
describes his thought as a “coalition system” [Koalitionssystem] in which he attempts to incorporate the
main ideas of previous schools of thought or important thinkers. The extent to which these ideas actually
can be made to fit into a coherent system is open for debate. Likewise, there is question among the scholars
as to which school of thought Maimon ultimately sides. The question is not easily resolved.
Maimon’s work was only rediscovered in the mid-1800’s and it just beginning to receive the attention that it
deserves. Until recently, he has achieved more notoriety because of his Autobiography, originally published
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in 1792-93, the first part of which is currently available in English. The book is noteworthy because, in
addition to documenting Maimon’s travels and tribulations, it provides one of the very earliest depictions of
life in an Eastern European Jewish community, a “stetl.” Despite the historical and “sociological”
significance of this Autobiography, he should be seen first and foremost as a philosopher. Kant recognized
Maimon’s talents and saw that Maimon was one of the few who seemed to understand the project of the first
Critique. Due to the similarity of themes on which Maimon wrote in his Versuch über die
Transcendentalphilosophie and themes that Kant addresses in the Critique of Judgment (1790), it is
possible that Maimon’s thought had some influence on doctrines that Kant brings forth in this Critique.
Fichte mentions Maimon by name in many places in his early work and there is no doubt that some of his
doctrines are responses to Maimon’s view. In fact, Maimon is one of the first philosophers of that era to take
the history of philosophy seriously and to attempt to show how his views are, in a certain respect, the
culmination of developments within the evolution of philosophical thought. In order to understand the
development of German Idealism, one must understand where Maimon fits into the movement. Maimon,
however, merits attention for being more than just an important, yet underappreciated figure in the
development of German Idealism. In particular, his worries about the gap between the quid juris and the
quid facti need to be applied to all of the philosophies in the movement. It is not clear if any of the major
figures of German Idealism – Fichte, Schelling, or Hegel – ultimately can or do give adequate responses to
the problem of the quid juris. More importantly, these worries can be extended to any type of systematic
philosophy or rationalistic system of thought. Maimon calls our attention to the fact that it is not enough if a
system, a philosophical or scientific system for example, is internally coherent. Internal coherence only gives
an answer to the question of the quid juris. What still needs to be shown is not simply how it is possible for
such a system to map onto our empirical world, but that the given system does, in fact, map onto the world.
Another way of looking at the issue is that Maimon is concerned with the status of science, in the broadest
connotation of “science.” It is not enough for science to provide us with a good story or a coherent story
about how the world is. Instead, science must give the correct story about how the world is and one that can
completely justify its claims. The problem is – and here we return to the gap between the quid juris and the
quid facti – science is still only giving us a good or seemingly accurate story.
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Maimon disagrees. He maintains that if mind and body, or intellect and intuition, are two radically different
sources of knowledge as Kant wants to maintain, then ultimately they can never to come together because
they are so radically different by definition. In other words, if intellect and intuition are so different, as Kant
wants to hold, then Kant already make it impossible for these two stems of knowledge to be unified. In
contrast, Maimon’s claims that the only way in which intellect and intuition can be united is if they are of
similar origin. Thus, he holds that the only solution to the quid juris is to assume that intellect and intuition
must be alike. He does not follow along empiricist lines where concepts are but abstractions from
sensations. Rather, he turns to the Leibniz-Wolff school for his solution to the problem. Maimon claims
that, ultimately, sensation – or intuition, as Kant terms it – has its root in the understanding. For Leibniz
and Wolff, sensation or intuition simply amounts to a confused form of conceptual knowledge; Maimon
concurs.
There are, however, two problems. First, knowledge – in Kant’s sense of the term – requires things-
in-themselves but the very positing of things-in-themselves appears to be a contradiction because this seems
to involve the extension of concepts to realms into which they are allowed to be extended. That is, in order to
cognize things-in-themselves we must use concepts and discursive or conceptually-based knowledge. But
things-in-themselves, by their very nature, are supposed to stand outside of conceptual knowledge. Second,
and more seriously, the doctrine of things-in-themselves does not help to resolve the matter of the quid
juris. That issue, as it will be remembered, concerns our justification for assuming that elements of
cognition that arise out of the intellect can possibly be combined together with elements of cognition that
arise empirically from the senses, or intuition, to use Kantian terminology. But if things-in-themselves stand
beyond our ability to cognize them, then we cannot know if concepts and intuitions have come together in a
way that truly reflects how things are.
Maimon criticizes Kant because he holds that Kant still has not adequately shown that we are justified in
believing in the applicability of a priori concepts that have their seat in the understanding to elements that
arise a posteriori from the senses. Kant, according to Maimon, simply assumes that we are affected “from
without” by things-in-themselves, and, in so doing, assumes the connection between a priori form and a
posteriori content
Maimon’s solution is 1) to have a criterion of truth that comes from within cognition itself, and 2) to show
how it is possible no longer to have the potentially unbridgeable gap between understanding and sensation.
As concerns the first point, Maimon simply believes that he is being true to the spirit of critical philosophy
insofar as he draws the criterion of truth from within consciousness. As concerns the second point, Maimon
looks back to the rationalist school, and to Leibnizian philosophy in particular. If sensation ultimately has its
root in the understanding, as it does for Leibniz, then there no longer is an issue of how two seemingly
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As his model, Maimon looks to mathematics insofar as the content of mathematics is not given to it
empirically, or so holds Maimon. In differential calculus in particular, he finds a way in which content can
be generated out of form. In short, Maimon thinks that all differences in quantity can be reduced to some
sort of quantitative relation. Hence, in Maimon’s philosophy, differentials play the same role that things-
in-themselves play for Kant. Differentials are not some type of a basic ontological entity such as atoms or
monads. Instead, differentials are the rules concerning the lawful relationship of objects. Differentials give
us the rule for producing an object. Take, for example, a triangle whose sides have the lengths 3 cm, 4 cm,
and 5 cm, respectively. The relationship between the sides and the angles in that triangle will be the same as
the relationship in a triangle whose sides have the lengths 3 rods, 4 rods, and 5 rods, respectively. The
relationship between the sides and angles of these two triangles will be the same, too, as that in a triangle
whose sides measure 9 inches, 12 inches, and 15 inches, respectively. The differential would be the rule for
producing a triangle with the relations of sides and angles exhibited by any of the aforementioned triangles.
Maimon holds that all the content of our knowledge would have to be able to be derived from a differential
as are the lengths of the sides of the triangle mentioned above. Accordingly, all qualia, all the content of
what we know, would be able to be understood in terms of differentials. Hence, for example, the redness of
an apple would not be “given” from without; rather, it would be a rule for producing what which we
experience empirically as the red color of the apple.
As was hinted as earlier, Maimon does not have a criterion of truth that stands outside of consciousness.
According to the commentator Hugo Bergmann, Maimon uses a doctrine that he finds in the Lebnizian
philosopher Christian Wolff’s 1730 text entitled Ontologia. According to Bergmann, in that work, Wolff
defines being as the completion of all possibility, that is, an object is fully actual when it is determined in all
of its parts. Maimon uses this idea as the basis for his view of what the thing-in-itself must be. The object
itself is no longer something outside of or beyond our cognition. The object is simply the sum of all
predicates that can be attributed to it. In order to clarify this notion, Maimon employs a distinction between
“presentation” (Darstellung) and “representation” (Vorstellung) that most likely comes from Mendelssohn.
When the object is cognized as fully determined, it is known as it truly is, and is, thus, a “presentation.”
When the object, however, is only partially cognized, it is not known in all of its determinations, and is, thus,
a “representation.”
It is at this juncture that Maimon mentions the infinite mind. The object itself, as it actually is, that is, as
presented, is the object insofar as it would be cognized by an infinite mind. The infinite mind does or would
cognize objects in terms of differentials, that is, in terms of presentations. The infinite mind would not see
objects as we humans see them, as given in space and time as well as insofar as they seem to be given from
something outside of us. The infinite mind sees everything in terms of rational form, as quantified relations.
Several commentators mention the likely influence of Maimonides, as well as Spinoza, on Maimon’s
doctrine of the infinite mind. In Book One, Chapter 68 of Maimonides Guide to the Perplexed, Maimonides
– who, in turn looks back to Aristotle – calls God the intellectus, the ens intelligens, and the ens intelligible
at one and the same time. God is the intellect, the thinking, and the thing that is being thought. In short, for
Maimon, the thing-in-itself no longer is something that it outside of consciousness or in some other realm as
that to which cognition must conform. Instead, the thing-in-itself would be the object as it would be
cognized by an infinite mind, one that no longer needs to cognition as having two parts; matter, which is
given to the understanding, and content, which is generated in and by the understanding. Maimon, in
holding this view, sticks to the spirit of Kantian philosophy, as opposed to the letter insofar as he provides
for a criterion of truth from within consciousness itself, one that need not refer to something beyond it,
namely Kant’s infamous thing-in-itself.
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There is some debate within Maimon scholarship as to whether the concept of the infinite mind is a
“constitutive idea” or a “regulative idea” (in Kant’s sense of the terms). Cases can be made, especially when
considering Maimon’s first book, the Versuch über die Transcendentalphilosophie on both sides of the
issue. Some passages seem to point toward the infinite mind as something actual, whereas others point to it
as a regulative idea, that is, a goal toward which we continually progress but that we can never fully attain.
However, it seems that as Maimon’s view develops during the 1790’s that his view gravitates more toward
the notion of the infinite mind as a regulative idea. That is, it is an ideal toward which we continually
progress but which we can never fully attain.
5. Intuition
For Kant, there are elements of cognition that are not reducible to one another: concepts and intuitions.
Because Maimon ultimately tries to reduce matter or content to something rational – namely differentials –
the question arises as to what status intuition has in his philosophy. His position has many similarities to
Leibniz’ view of senation. For Maimon, space and time, ultimately are concepts that deal pertaining to
diversity.
Yet, in order to make sense of Maimon’s view of intuition, one must first understand his view on the role of
the imagination (Einbildungskraft). Human beings, in Maimon’s view, possess finite faculties of cognition,
unlike an infinite mind that would have an infinite faculty of cognition. The infinite mind would not see
objects in terms of a matter or content that was given to it and which has been taken up, synthesized and,
hence, given a form according to concepts generated by the understanding. Instead, the infinite
understanding would cognize all objects in terms of concepts and differentials, that is, in a wholly rational or
quantitative manner. Unfortunately, we humans do not cognize, say, the color red or the flavor of an apple
or the sound of middle C played on the piano in terms of differentials. Aspects of these, their conceptual
qualities, may be described according to categories or there may be rational aspects of the experience of
them. Yet, according to Maimon, we still cognize the world in terms of form – which is rational and
generated by us – and content – irrational and given to us from somewhere else or by something else.
Because we do not see the world as an infinite understanding would see the world, that is, as wholly
rationally and quantitatively, we must have recourse to something else to aid the understanding. This role,
for Maimon, belongs to the imagination . The imagination literally fills in where the understanding stops.
Thus, for example, when we do not perceive the difference between two objects wholly in conceptual terms,
the imagination fills in by generating intuitions. So, when we do not see two objects as conceptually
different, their difference is manifested by the imagination in terms of temporal and spatial differences.
Maimon has Leibniz’ notion of the identity of indiscernibles in mind here. (If two objects are identical, then
the must be indiscernible). For Leibniz, if two objects are different, then there must be a conceptual basis for
their difference. This conceptual difference plays out as a difference in intuition when the mind that
cognizes this difference cannot understand it conceptually.
For Kant, space and time are a priori forms of intuition. Furthermore, Kant views them as pure forms of
intuition. It is possible, on Kant’s view, to think of space and time devoid of all objects or prior to any objects
that fill them out. Conversely, Maimon’s conception is much closer to that of Leibniz, where space and time
as intuitions represent the relations between two or more objects. A space and time devoid of objects is
impossible on his view. Furthermore, space and time as concepts, upon which the intuitions rest, are simply
notions of diversity. For Maimon, the infinite mind does not or would not cognize objects either spatially or
temporally; the infinite mind’s cognition would stand outside of all space and time.
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According to this interpretation, one which is not unique to Maimon, because time is a priori and pure, as a
form of intuition, and because time underlies all intuitions, be they spatial or temporal, time serves as the
bridge between a priori concepts and intuitions, pure or a posteriori. It must be remembered that from the
outset of the Critique of Pure Reason, Kant claims that he is attempting to prove how synthetic a priori
statements are possible, not that synthetic a priori statements exist (he simply assumes this latter point). In
other words, he is trying to show how it can be possible that experience of the world, and in particular
scientific accounts of that experience, can have an a priori, and, thus, objective ground. Thus, simply put, by
looking to mathematics he assumes that scientific experience, that is synthetic a priori statements, in fact,
do exist. His task, in the first Critique, is to give an account of how it is possible for this experience to be
objective or, which is the same, to show how there can be synthetic a priori statements.
Unfortunately, Maimon holds that the quid facti – that there exist synthetic a priori statements --- remains
unanswered and that this, in fact, is really a more serious problem. In other words, Maimon claims that it is
not enough merely to show how it is possible that concepts of the understanding can come to be connected
with so-called intuitions, that is, something seemingly given from without. Maimon holds that it still
remains to be shown that concepts of the understanding actually are connected with intuitions. In short,
Maimon questions Kant’s basic assumption that scientific experience exists, that is, that there actually are
synthetic a priori statements. Hume, could be correct, in Maimon’s view. That is, we seem to see regularity
in the world and the world seems to operate according to laws (of physics, biology, chemistry, etc.).
However, this does not guarantee that the regularity that we think we see in the world or the conformity of
events to laws actually has its basis in the laws themselves (or in the understanding). Hume could be correct
that cause and effect are simply the mind’s habit of associating together objects or classes of objects and this
would not make our experience of the world any different. In the end, the problem of the quid facti still
remains. While it may be the case that there is regularity in our experience of the world, the does not
guarantee as a fact that the understanding lies as the basis of this regularity, that is, that this regularity and
law-like behavior is objectively valid.
Hence, the highest principles of philosophy and science are still, in Maimon’s strict view, hypotheses.
Mathematics is the only discipline in which both the form and matter of the knowledge involved in the
discipline can be shown to be created according to objectively valid laws by the understanding. Science and
philosophy can and do give us systems that are internally coherent, but this does not guarantee that such
systems actually map onto the world. The systems that science and philosophy have given us, perhaps, give
good stories as to how the seemingly regularity of the world has arisen. However, this does not guarantee
that the universe is regular and it also does not guarantee that any law (especially laws generated by the
understanding) necessitate the world coming to pass as it does. Again, Hume could be correct and the order
that we think that we see in the world could be the consequence of a habit of the mind.
As a result, scholars are divided on how to understand Maimon’s philosophy on the whole. Some critics
claim that as his thought and writing unfolded in the 1790’s, the problem of the quid juris faded and the
problem of the quid facti came more and more into the spotlight. Such critics tend to understand Maimon’s
philosophy ultimately as a skepticism (Kuntze, Erdmann). One critic (Atlas) thinks that Maimon simply
leaves us between the two horns of a dilemma, extreme rationalism and skepticism. Finally, some critics
(Cassirer, Beiser) think that Maimon may have found a solution to the two horns of the dilemma or a
so-called “middle path.” On this interpretation, Maimon admits that the quid facti is as of yet resolved.
However, at least on Beiser’s interpretation, Maimon’s rationalistic model (with the theory of the infinite
mind and differentials) as an ideal to which, step by step, we get closer. We can never reach this goal, as only
an infinite intellect could do so. However, it is a goal toward which we should and do progress.
7. Transcendental Logic
As does Kant, Maimon holds that transcendental logic is in fact more basic than formal logic. The problem,
on Maimon’s view, is that people traditionally hold logic to be a discipline that is independent from
metaphysics. Maimon shows, however, that formal logic must, in fact, assume certain facts about reality,
and, in particular, about objects. Hence, transcendental logic is prior to formal logic.
The standard view of formal logic is that it only deals with the form of judgments and abstracts from any
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content whatsoever. For example, the standard view is taken as holding that when one makes the claim that
“If X implies Y and if Y implies Z, then X implies Z,” such a statement is true regardless of what is
substituted in for “X,” “Y,” and “Z,” respectively. Furthermore, the standard view would be that the truth of
this argument is solely a function of the form of the argument. According to Maimon, however, the problem
with formal logic is by abstracting wholly from objects, it can only deal with one sort of diversity: negation.
That is, in strict terms, if X is different from Y, then formal logic can only understand Y in terms of not-X. If
“red” is symbolized by “X,” then formally, without any other assumptions, “blue” can only be symbolized as
“not-X.” Similarly, “yellow” can only be symbolized as “not-X,” too. Be we know that yellow is not the same
as blue.
Here is where, according to Maimon, transcendental logic underlies formal logic. Transcendental logic is a
logic of content, whereas formal logic supposedly deals only with form. On Maimon’s view, in order for
formal logic to be able to represent a diversity of objects – that is, in order that “blue” and “yellow” be not
both symbolized by “not-X” and in order for them to be symbolized as, say, “Y,” and “Z,” respectively – then
an actual diversity of objects must be assumed. This requires that the content of “X,” “Y,” and “Z” must be
different, otherwise, the diversity of anything other than X could only be represented by “not-X.” Hence,
Maimon claims that transcendental logic underlies formal logic and that formal logic must acknowledge that
content does play a role for it.
This principle, which Maimon labels the “principle of determinability” (Satz des Bestimmbarkeit), is related
to his notion of transcendental logic, discussed above. What this principle, in theory, is supposed to achieve,
is to provide a way for determining when thought is “really” true versus when it is only “formally” true. As an
example, consider the statement: “all unicorns are one-horned.” Most would accept this statement as true
on the basis that if one understands the concept “unicorn” and the concept “one-horned,” then one
immediately sees that the statement must be true. The obvious problem is there are no unicorns. Hence,
such a claim is only formally true and does not necessarily describe any feature of our world. If unicorns do
indeed exist, then they must be one-horned. Yet, there are strong reasons for denying the existence of
unicorns.
For Maimon, the principle of determinability holds that there is a determinable (Bestimmbare) that
becomes determined by a determination (Bestimmung). The relationship between these two is one-sided.
The determinable can be thought without the determination, whereas the determination can only apply to
that particular determinable. Another way to view this is as the relationship between a subject and a true
predicate. On Maimon’s account, the relation of determinability exists when this one-sided relationship
holds. If the two can be thought apart from one-another, then the relationship of determinability does not
exist and the judgment is not real; it is arbitrary. Thus, one cannot say with accuracy that “the table is sick.”
Tables do not become sick and this is shown by the fact that “table” can be thought apart from “sick” just as
much as “sick” can be thought apart from table. Accordingly, we do not speak – or think – correctly when we
say that “the sick person is pale.” Both “sick person” and “pale” can be thought apart from each other and,
hence, no relationship of determinability exists. To speak and to think properly, one needs to say that “the
sick person’s color is pale.” Here, a relation of determinability exists because while one can think of “sick
person” and never call to mind the concept of “paleness,” it is impossible to think of “paleness” without
bringing in the concept of color. That is, “pale” is not a true determination of “sick person,” but rather “pale”
is a determination of “color.” Likewise, “color” is a determination of “plane,” etc..
It must be remembered that Maimon holds that a subject or a determinable may only have one predicate or
determination at any given time. As a result, true knowledge of an object would amount to a given chain of
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determinations going from the most particular determination up to the most general. In this respect,
Maimon shows the influence of Leibniz on his philosophy because Maimon’s position amounts to the idea
that the principle of sufficient reason now also becomes a standard or criterion for cognition. Every
predicate or determination must be correctly lined to its proper subject or determinable and in doing so,
one, literally, provides a sufficient reason as to why that particular determination and not some other must
chosen. Thus, in a true science, we could move from the absolute particular or predicate all the way up to the
most general statement or proposition. In such a fashion, the principle of determinability serves as a
criterion for knowledge and in this respect Maimon again reflects the influence of rationalism on his
thought.
So, Maimon sets out to provide a new foundation for duty. His strategy is to find something more basic than
duty, yet out of which duty can be derived. He claims to have found this more basic “fact” in what he sees to
be the drive in all humans for the cognition of truth. This “fact” is proven or guaranteed by the actual human
condition (on Maimon’s view) that all humans strive after truth and Maimon assumes that this is
undeniable. Furthermore, on his view, the essence of truth is universality or universal validity
[Allgemeingültikeit]. On this conception, what makes something true is that fact that all rational beings, and
especially an infinite being, could agree to the validity of the claim whose veracity is in question. In turn, the
drive toward truth is based on an even more fundamental drive that all humans have: the so-called “drive
toward making all representations universally valid” [Trieb zur Allgemeingültigmachung der
Vorstellungen.].
Maimon, though, still needs to make an explicit connection between ethics and cognition. He achieves this
insofar as he views reason as strictly instrumental in nature. In fact, reason and will are not separate
faculties for Maimon. Reason can only tell us if action X is the best way to arrive at point B from point A,
that is, if all people could, in theory, choose action X as the only means or the best means for arriving at
Point B, as well as if arriving at point B as a goal is something that does not interfere with the goals of
others. The good action, for Maimon, ends up being the universally valid action, the one to which all people,
in theory, could assent.
Because willing now has a relation to truth, Maimon offers a slightly different formulation of that moral law
than does Kant. His reformulated moral principle is: “Act so that your will can be thought of as the will of
every rational being.” As it turns out, there are several differences of Maimon’s view from that of Kant. First,
Kant’s Categorical Imperative focuses on the principle underlying willing – the maxim – whereas Maimon’s
moral principle focuses on the act of willing itself. Second, Maimon literally means that an action would be
wrong if every last rational being were not, at least in theory and when being rational, able to agree to it. For
example, even if society as a whole wanted a convicted murderer to be put to death, it would be immoral to
put the murdered to death, if this convicted murderer did not assent to such a punishment. Finally, Maimon
holds that one cannot have duties toward oneself. That is, if one were the last remaining person on earth,
then issues such as gluttony or suicide would no longer fall within the realm of morality because they would
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affect no other person but oneself.. For Maimon, morality becomes an issue only because of one’s
relationship to other willing beings.
Parallel to the situation with his epistemology that was mentioned earlier, Maimon has, with this
reformulation of the moral principle, given an answer to the question of the quid juris. That is, he has shown
how it is possible to ground the moral law. In other words, he thinks that he has proven how the moral law
possibly can affect us. However, the issue of the quid facti still remains because Maimon needs to show how,
in fact, the moral law actually determines a person to behave in a certain manner. In this regard, Maimon
goes in a different direction than Kant.
In his moral philosophy, Kant does not want to allow material principles to determine the will because he
worries that any reliance on material principles amounts to a return to subjectivism. Material principles are
simply principles arising from the content, as opposed to the form, of a person’s basis or reason for acting.
To give an example, if one behaved in a certain manner because one desired happiness as one’s goal or
because one wanted physical pleasure, then, on Kant’s view, material principles – happiness or pleasure –
would be the determining ground of the will. Kant worries that all content turns out to be subjective and,
thus, if any content becomes the “motive” for why a person acts, then that person acts on subjective
grounds. In particular, Kant is worried about feelings (love, hate, envy) or abstract concepts (happiness,
power) or states of mind (bliss, joy) as determininations of the will because all of these are “material,” and,
hence, subjective. In other words, Kant holds that his version of the moral principle is universally valid
specifically because its universality is derived from the form of the principle and not from the content of the
situation in which one finds oneself. The only purely moral determining ground for the will, on Kant’s view,
must be respect for the moral law. Anything else, such as love, compassion, etc, however, selfless it may
seem to be, always ends up being subjective. Furthermore, Kant holds that we can only know after the fact
that the moral law has determined one’s will and this is because it causes us pain or hurt, insofar as we did
not behave in the manner in which we had originally desired to behave. Actually, he links “respect” for the
moral law to the displeasure one feels in behaving against the way in which one wanted to behave.
Maimon finds Kant’s position unconvincing because he believes that the form of an action cannot ultimately
serve as the motive for action. In short, on his view, the understanding or reason can never choose the
ultimate goal for which we act. For Maimon, happiness or pleasure is, in the end, the reason for which we
act. Fortunately, Maimon believes that there is one type of pleasure that is not subjective and which can
serve as the basis for moral motivation. Loosely following Spinoza, Maimon believes that every increase in a
being’s power is accompanied by a feeling of pleasure [Vergnügen]. True cognition, on his view, involves the
ultimate increase in our power. Thus, every time a person performs a moral action, an action that is
universally valid, the action is accompanied by a great pleasure. Hence, Maimon believes that the pleasure
involved in moral action can serve as motivation to be moral and one that is not subjective at all.
As Maimon’s philosophy matures over his short writing career, he seems to move away from the view given
above (somewhat paralleling what some commentators see happening in his epistemological views, too). By
the time of the essay, the “Moral Skeptic” [Der moralische Skeptiker] of 1800, Maimon gives naturalistic
account of ethics, seeing it basically in terms of legality, that is, as a way to protect peace and harmony
between people in society. It seems as if in the domain of ethics that the issue of the quid facti still bothered
Maimon and that he had to revise his account of why it is and how it is that people behave morally.
Related to, although different from his ethical theory, Maimon’s 1795 essay entitled, “Über die ersten
Gründe des Naturrechts” [“On the First Grounds of Natural Law”] contains the clearest statement of
Maimon's legal theory. (Fichte goes out of his way to mention this essay in the introduction to his
Foundations of Natural Right, published one year later). Maimon’s view is that legality and law aids in with
the application and practice of morality. Often times, according to Maimon, there are situations in which no
decision can be reached based solely on morality. It is in these cases that legality must be brought in to
resolve the problem. For example, two people happen to come upon money on the sidewalk. A goodwill
attempt to find the one who lost the money fails. Which of the two people can claim the money? In this case,
morality cannot decide. Both people are morally justified in taking possession of the money as there is
nothing immoral about one or the other pocketing the money. However, it is not possible for both to have
the money. Law is supposed to aid such cases by setting down rules on how to resolves such situations.
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Author Information
Andrew Kelley
Email: akelley@bradley.edu
Bradley University
U. S. A.
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