Critique of Judgement by Immanuel Kant Chapter 87 Page 6

freedom), then there would certainly be (relative) purposes in the world, but no (absolute) final purpose, because the existence of such rational beings would be always purposeless. But the moral laws have this peculiar characteristic that they prescribe to Reason something as a purpose without any condition, and consequently exactly as the concept of a final purpose requires. The existence of a Reason that can be for itself the supreme law in the purposive reference, in other words the existence of rational beings under moral laws, can therefore alone be thought as the final purpose of the being of a world.

If on the contrary this be not so, there would be either no purpose at all in the cause of its being, or there would be purposes, but no final purpose.