18 Allen Wood argues that Kant is simultaneously presenting two different arguments for the impossibility of the maxim in favour of offering false promises. He claims that the argument which concentrates on the impossibility of attaining the end of promising cannot produce a contradiction in conception but only a contradiction in the will. In effect, the agent holding the universalized maxim is both willing to attain the end and willing to undermine her ability to realize this end. The result is a contradiction in the will wherein it holds contrary volitions. The will holding contrary volitions is something which we can conceive of and is, therefore, not the same as a contradiction in conception. Wood concludes that while Kant presents two possible arguments against the maxim in favour of offering false promises, one does not produce the type of contradiction for which Kant is looking and, hence, should be disregarded. Allen W. Wood, ‘Kant on false promises’, in Proceedings of the Third International Kant Congress, ed. Beck, Lewis White (Dordrecht: D. Reidel, 1972), pp. 614–19CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Korsgaard's model for deriving contradictions in conception by negating the analytic structure of hypothetical imperatives seemingly evades Wood's potential criticism that undermining the end of receiving needed money only produces a contradiction in the will. However, if my critique of the practical contradiction procedure is upheld, Wood's treatment of Kant's ambiguous passage may prove useful.