[21] Prof. J. S. Mackenzie, A Manual of Ethics, 4th ed., p. 431. The italics are mine.

[22] Prolegomena to Ethics, p. 178.

[23] This sense of the term must be carefully distinguished from that in which the agent’s intention may be said to be ‘right,’ if only the results he intended would have been the best possible.

[24] Kant, so far as I know, never expressly states this view, but it is implied e.g. in his argument against Heteronomy.


Transcriber’s note