
Ari S. answered 12/10/19
Coding tutor with a MS in Data Science, a MBA and a BS in Neuroscience
Kant argued the categorical imperative which essentially means acting how you believe everyone should act. This makes a moral action for Kant an action that you believe everyone should do. Choosing whether to steal something is a simple example. When confronted with the question "Should I steal this?", Kant would argue you should ask yourself whether you think everyone in the world should or shouldn't steal. If you think the world would be better off by having everyone not steal, then that becomes the moral decision.