Great Traditions in Ethics: An IntroductionAmerican Book Company, 1953 - Всего страниц: 362 |
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Стр. vi
... thought about man's moral life will not be better , as certainly he will be wiser , for the pains . The augury of this effort is made brighter for what may be thought a negative , but what , for that reason , I esteem a strategic ...
... thought about man's moral life will not be better , as certainly he will be wiser , for the pains . The augury of this effort is made brighter for what may be thought a negative , but what , for that reason , I esteem a strategic ...
Стр. vii
... thoughts . This thought - shepherding function is initial and crucial . Any improvement in practice will issue indirectly from it . We teachers of ethics may or may not be wiser than other of our intellectual colleagues as to what ought ...
... thoughts . This thought - shepherding function is initial and crucial . Any improvement in practice will issue indirectly from it . We teachers of ethics may or may not be wiser than other of our intellectual colleagues as to what ought ...
Стр. 56
... thought the virtues were rules or rational principles ( for he thought they were , all of them , forms of scientific knowl- edge ) , while we think they involve a rational principle.m 13. Although Aristotle acknowledges the importance ...
... thought the virtues were rules or rational principles ( for he thought they were , all of them , forms of scientific knowl- edge ) , while we think they involve a rational principle.m 13. Although Aristotle acknowledges the importance ...
Содержание
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
MORAL CHARACTER | 36 |
THE PLEASANT LIFE | 60 |
Авторские права | |
Не показаны другие разделы: 8
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
according action actual appetites argument Aristotle assertion Ayer body called categorical imperative cause Christian City of God conception conduct conscience consequences constitution death defined definition desire Dewey disagreement in belief distinction divine doctrine duty effect emotions Epictetus Epicurean Epicurus ethical theory evil existence express external fact faculty fear feeling G. E. Moore happiness Hobbes human nature idea ideal imperative injustice intellectual judgment justice Kant kind knowledge law of nature live logical man's matter means ment mind moral Nietzsche normative ethical notion objects pain passions peace person philosophers Plato pleasure political possess practical proposition Protagoras psychological hedonism question rational principle reason regard Saint Augustine sake self-love sense social society Socrates soul Spinoza spirit statements Stoic suppose things Thomas Hobbes thought tion transvaluation of values true truth understand University unjust utilitarian virtue word wrong