Another motive for action is when something is done according to duty and actually wants to do it – this is also called immediate inclination. An example of this principle would be a happily married man. However, there is a hot new intern in the office who is constantly hitting on him. He finds the intern physically attractive but doesn't really want to be with her. He reflects that he could actually have an affair with this intern if he wanted to, but he won't in a million years because he is extremely happy with his wife. He wouldn't risk that relationship for the chance at a fling. According to Kant this would have no moral value because it arises from immediate inclination, not from the motive of duty. The fourth is to act but only out of duty. An example of someone acting out of duty would be a woman who marries a man out of love. Their marriage is initially happy and happy, however the two drift apart, but continue to maintain their usual routines just to run the family, more like roommates than lovers. Her husband is therefore in really bad shape...
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