Five Types of Ethical TheoryK. Paul, Trench, Trubner, 1959 - Всего страниц: 288 Five typical theories of ethics, viz., those of Spinoza, Butler, Hume, Kant, and Sidgwick. |
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Стр. 56
... relations of the King , the Lords , and the Commons . According to him none of Wrong - doing is always the Now Butler explicitly compares the nature of man both to a watch and to a constitution . He says that we do not fully understand ...
... relations of the King , the Lords , and the Commons . According to him none of Wrong - doing is always the Now Butler explicitly compares the nature of man both to a watch and to a constitution . He says that we do not fully understand ...
Стр. 111
... relations which would make us approve or condemn human beings . Yet we do not make ethical judgments about inanimate objects . When a young tree destroys the older tree which produced it , the two trees stand in precisely the same relations ...
... relations which would make us approve or condemn human beings . Yet we do not make ethical judgments about inanimate objects . When a young tree destroys the older tree which produced it , the two trees stand in precisely the same relations ...
Стр. 112
... relations in a situation before I can make a trustworthy judgment on the ethical relations . ( b ) When I am fully cognisant of the non - ethical relations I cannot infer , from them and them alone , the ethical relations ; as I might ...
... relations in a situation before I can make a trustworthy judgment on the ethical relations . ( b ) When I am fully cognisant of the non - ethical relations I cannot infer , from them and them alone , the ethical relations ; as I might ...
Содержание
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
SPINOZA | 15 |
Spinoza exaggerated the range of rational knowledge and gave | 22 |
Авторские права | |
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accepted action agent analysis argument balance of happiness believe benevolence Butler C. D. BROAD C. K. OGDEN called categorical imperative causal cognition common-sense conative dispositions conatus connexion conscience consequences contemplate course deontological desire determined disapproval doctrine doubt duty Egoistic emotion of approval ethical characteristics Ethical Egoism Ethical Hedonism ethical judgments ethical theory experience fact feel fittingness fundamental hedonic quality Hedonist hold human Hume hypothetical imperative ideal Intuitionism Intuitionist intuitive Kant Kant's kind logical matter means mental mental events mind moral Moral Cognition motive Naturalistic nature non-ethical characteristic non-hedonic notion object particular impulses passive emotions philosophical plausible pleasant pleasures and pains possible postulate principle priori concepts propositions Psychological Egoism Psychological Hedonism purely question rational Reason recognise relations right or wrong rules seems self-evident self-love sensations sense Sidgwick simply situation Spinoza Suppose teleological theory things true Universalistic Utilitarian virtue whilst whole