Kant limited reason to moral imperatives
Immanuel Kant believed human reason's ultimate purpose is not to understand the universe, but to establish universal moral laws based on duty and rational autonomy.
Immanuel Kant, an 18th-century philosopher, argued that human reason can't fully grasp ultimate truths like God or the universe's origin. Instead, he believed reason's true power lies in guiding our moral actions. This idea, from his 1781 work, the *Critique of Pure Reason*, shifted focus from theoretical knowledge to ethics.
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