I would think that the Hypothetical Imperatives are useful there. You can thus break down your own opinions into material of the form:
“If the set X of imperative premises holds, and the set Y of factual premises holds, then logic Z dictates that further actions W are imperative.
“I hold X already, and I can convince logic Z of the factual truth of Y, thus I believe W to be imperative.”
Even all those complete bastards who disagree with your X can thus come to an agreement with you about the hypothetical as a whole, provided they are epistemically rational. Having isolated the area of disagreement to X, Y, or Z, you can then proceed to argue about it.
I would think that the Hypothetical Imperatives are useful there. You can thus break down your own opinions into material of the form:
“If the set X of imperative premises holds, and the set Y of factual premises holds, then logic Z dictates that further actions W are imperative.
“I hold X already, and I can convince logic Z of the factual truth of Y, thus I believe W to be imperative.”
Even all those complete bastards who disagree with your X can thus come to an agreement with you about the hypothetical as a whole, provided they are epistemically rational. Having isolated the area of disagreement to X, Y, or Z, you can then proceed to argue about it.