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universalizable

Universalizable is an adjective used in ethics and philosophy to describe a rule, principle, or action that could be adopted as a universal law without contradiction. It is central to Kantian ethics, where moral evaluation rests on the capacity of a maxim to be universalized.

In Kant’s framework, the test is the Formula of Universal Law: act only according to maxims you

Examples help illustrate: lying to obtain a loan would be incoherent if everyone did it, because trust

The notion has influence beyond Kant, often invoked in discussions of moral reasoning and rule formulation.

Etymology: from Latin universalis, meaning for all or general.

could
will
to
become
universal
laws.
If
universalizing
a
maxim
would
make
its
own
aim
impossible
or
undermine
the
concept
of
the
principle,
the
action
is
impermissible.
in
promises
would
collapse,
so
the
maxim
cannot
be
universalized.
Making
false
promises
is
another
classic
case:
if
everyone
made
false
promises,
the
institution
of
promising
would
lose
its
force.
By
contrast,
behaving
in
a
way
that
could
be
universalized,
such
as
keeping
genuine
promises
or
taking
actions
that
respect
others,
aligns
with
moral
permissibility.
Critics
argue
that
universalizability
can
be
too
rigid,
difficult
to
apply
to
complex
or
conflicting
duties,
or
insufficient
to
settle
moral
questions
on
its
own.
Nevertheless,
it
remains
a
foundational
concept
for
assessing
whether
a
maxim
could
be
harmonized
with
rational,
universalizable
norms.