Immanuel Kant reshaped moral philosophy—but not in favor of the individual.
In this video, Reverend Count MoriVond examines Kant’s rigid system of duty, his categorical imperative, and his attempt to bind human action to universal law. From a Satanic perspective, such constraints stand in direct opposition to the sovereignty of the self.
This is neither reverence or attack—it is critique.
Through the lens of I-Theism, we confront Kant as a philosopher of limitation, questioning whether morality should ever supersede personal will. In this light, Kant becomes not merely a philosopher of limits, but a necessary adversary in the pursuit of intellectual and existential autonomy.