| Joseph Butler - 1813 - عدد الصفحات: 496
...circumstances gave them power; and which, •when fixed and habitual in any person, we call, his character. It does not appear, that brutes have the least reflex...as such, are at all an object to their perception. JBut to ours they are ; and they are the object, and the only one, of the approving and disapproving... | |
| Joseph Butler (bp. of Durham.) - 1819 - عدد الصفحات: 362
...circumstances gave them power ; and which, when fixed and habitual in any person, we call, his character. 'It does not appear, that brutes' have the least reflex...their perception. But to ours they are ; and they ave the object, and the only one, of the approving and disapproving faculty. Acting, conduct, behaviour,... | |
| Joseph Butler, Samuel Hallifax - 1819 - عدد الصفحات: 256
...circumstances gave them power, and which, when fixed and habitual in any person, we call his character. It does not appear that brutes have the least reflex...very nature of actions, as such, are at all an object of their perception. But to ours they are; and they are the object, and the only one, of the approving... | |
| Joseph Butler - 1820 - عدد الصفحات: 264
...circumstances gave them power, and which, when fixed and habitual in any person, we call his character. It does not appear that brutes have the least reflex...very nature of actions, as such, are at all an object of their perception. But to ours they are; and they are the object, and the only one, of the approving... | |
| Renn Dickson Hampden - 1827 - عدد الصفحات: 360
...which constitute virtuousness or viciousness in them. " It does not appear," observes Bishop Butler, " that brutes have the least reflex sense of actions...as such, are at all an object to their perception." Diss. on the Nature of Virtue, p. 434. Bishop Hallifax's Ed. views of the divine procedure presented... | |
| William Dennis - 1870 - عدد الصفحات: 106
...distinctness in the view presented were the inevitable result. Bishop Butler, for example, asserts / that " will and design, which constitute the very nature of actions as such, . . . are the object and the only one of the approving and disapproving faculty," and that " this principle in... | |
| Sir Lewis Amherst Selby-Bigge - 1897 - عدد الصفحات: 512
...circumstances gave them power ; and which, when fixed and habitual in any person, we call his character. It does not appear that brutes have the least reflex...constitute the very nature of actions as such, are at all \ 1) apcrtf xal mutta — if frflad, oAAd ivfpyiiq. M. Anton, lib. ix. 1 6. Virtutis laus omnis in... | |
| Stephen L. Darwall - 1995 - عدد الصفحات: 376
...under that name active or practical principles." And he writes that brutes lack conscience because "that will and design, which constitute the very nature of actions as such, are not at all an object of their perception" (DV.2). 17. And he may also be taking the same view of some... | |
| Jerome B. Schneewind - 1998 - عدد الصفحات: 652
...quietly drops it. Conscience is not a repository of laws, and it does not assess external actions but "will and design, which constitute the very nature of actions as such" (Virtue 2). Although our intention of consequences is part of "design," the actual outcome is not.... | |
| Sir Lewis Amherst Selby-Bigge - 1897 - عدد الصفحات: 510
...that brutes have the least reflex sense of actions, as distinguished from events ; or that willjand design, which constitute the very nature of actions as such, are at all i nai xaxia — it- vtiati, d\Ad tytpyflq. M. Anton, lib. ix. 1 6. Virtuiis laus omnis in actione consistit.... | |
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