An Introduction to Modern Philosophy in Six Philosophical Problems |
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Page 368
... obligation ?, we see that it is always a claim actually made by some concrete person . Claim and obligation are , in fact , coextensive terms . They cover each other exactly . Without a claim , actually made by some concrete person ...
... obligation ?, we see that it is always a claim actually made by some concrete person . Claim and obligation are , in fact , coextensive terms . They cover each other exactly . Without a claim , actually made by some concrete person ...
Page 369
... obligations does not keep the largest obligations from having their ground in personal claims . Wherever persons exist and value things , wherever they make claims upon one another , there good , evil , and obligation exist , and there ...
... obligations does not keep the largest obligations from having their ground in personal claims . Wherever persons exist and value things , wherever they make claims upon one another , there good , evil , and obligation exist , and there ...
Page 370
... obligation , we have an obligation that is objective , independent of any individual , and binding upon all individuals . What is God's conception of the good ? Either James doesn't know , or he feels that that is another question to be ...
... obligation , we have an obligation that is objective , independent of any individual , and binding upon all individuals . What is God's conception of the good ? Either James doesn't know , or he feels that that is another question to be ...
Contents
AN ACCOUNT OF THIS BOOK | 1 |
David Hume | 39 |
An argument for limited theism | 57 |
Copyright | |
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action answer appear argue argument argument from design believe body bourgeoisie called cause citations civil claim conception criticism culture David Hume Deity distinction doctrine duty ethical evil existence experience external fact feel fiction follow freedom God's Hans Vaihinger happiness Hegel Hobbes human Hume hypothesis ideal ideas Immanuel Kant individual intuitive knowledge J. S. Mill James John Stuart Mill Kant Kant's king knowledge liberty mankind master morality matter means ment metaphysics Mill's mind miracles modern morality natural theology notion objects obligation Pascal passions perceived persons philosophy political position possible pragmatic principle priori problem production proletariat qualities rational READING QUESTIONS reality reason religion Schopenhauer sensations sense skepticism social society sovereign sovereignty speculation spirit substance suppose theism theory things Thomas Thomas Hobbes thought tion transvaluation of values true truth understanding universe whole words