Great Traditions in Ethics: SelectionsVan Nostrand, 1975 - 451 من الصفحات |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 57
الصفحة 25
... individual writ large . " Socrates and Glaucon , discussing the virtues , agree that “ the same principles which exist in the state exist also in the individual , and that they are three in number . " The exposition of the several ...
... individual writ large . " Socrates and Glaucon , discussing the virtues , agree that “ the same principles which exist in the state exist also in the individual , and that they are three in number . " The exposition of the several ...
الصفحة 136
... individual . Values are transient , because the desire for an object may change to indifference or even to aversion : what is good on one occasion may on another be ethically neutral or even evil . Values are relative to the individual ...
... individual . Values are transient , because the desire for an object may change to indifference or even to aversion : what is good on one occasion may on another be ethically neutral or even evil . Values are relative to the individual ...
الصفحة 230
... individual psychological hedonism and universal ethical hedonism . According to the former , the sole motive of an action is an individual's desire for happiness , i.e. , for a balance of pleasure over pain . According to the latter ...
... individual psychological hedonism and universal ethical hedonism . According to the former , the sole motive of an action is an individual's desire for happiness , i.e. , for a balance of pleasure over pain . According to the latter ...
المحتوى
Introduction | 1 |
Moral Character | 36 |
The Pleasant Life | 60 |
حقوق النشر | |
15 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
according action actually antinomianism argues argument arises Aristotle assertion attitude Baier body C. L. Stevenson called categorical imperative cause Christian conception conscience consequences constitution contrary death defined definition desire Dewey Discuss distinction divine doctrine duty effect emotions Epictetus Epicurean Epicurus ethical theory evil existence existentialism express external fact faculty feeling follow freedom G. E. Moore Guide to Additional happiness Hobbes human nature idea ideal individual injustice intellectual interest judgments justice Kant kind knowledge live logical man's matter means ment mind moral Nietzsche normative normative ethical notion object pain particular passions person philosophers Plato pleasure possible practice proposition psychological hedonism question Rawls reason regard rules Saint Augustine self-interest self-love sense situation ethics social society Socrates soul Spinoza Stoic suppose things Thomas Hobbes tion true truth understand University unjust utilitarian virtue word wrong