Categorical Imperative
Kant's supreme moral principle—an unconditional command binding all rational agents. Unlike hypothetical imperatives ('if you want X, do Y'), categorical imperatives are binding regardless of desires. Kant formulated it three ways: universalizability (act only by maxims you could will as universal law), humanity formulation (treat humanity always as end, never merely as means), and kingdom of ends (act as legislating for an ideal moral community).
Real World
When whistleblower Edward Snowden leaked NSA surveillance documents, he faced a Kantian dilemma: lying to protect sources fails the universalisability test, yet treating citizens as mere surveillance objects also violates the humanity formulation.
Exam Focus
Apply all three formulations when answering 'assess' questions — single-formulation answers rarely access the highest AO2 bands.
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