Philosophy: The Quest for Truth |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 90
Page 156
... common sense have the truth on their side . If this is not done , then the beliefs of common sense are not completely justified , because con- flicting sceptical hypotheses have not been shown to be unjustified . From this premise it ...
... common sense have the truth on their side . If this is not done , then the beliefs of common sense are not completely justified , because con- flicting sceptical hypotheses have not been shown to be unjustified . From this premise it ...
Page 234
... common . They are all cases where the things or properties on the receiving end of the reduction are observ- able things and properties within our common- sense conceptual framework . They show that in- tertheoretic reduction occurs not ...
... common . They are all cases where the things or properties on the receiving end of the reduction are observ- able things and properties within our common- sense conceptual framework . They show that in- tertheoretic reduction occurs not ...
Page 458
... common power , to keep them in awe , and to direct their actions to the common benefit . The only way to erect such a common power , as may be able to defend them from the invasion of foreigners , and the injuries of one another , and ...
... common power , to keep them in awe , and to direct their actions to the common benefit . The only way to erect such a common power , as may be able to defend them from the invasion of foreigners , and the injuries of one another , and ...
Contents
What Is Philosophy? | 1 |
A Little Bit of Logic | 23 |
Philosophy of Religion 3355 | 35 |
Copyright | |
24 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
abortion according action animals answer argues argument behavior believe Bertrand Russell body bourgeoisie brain called capital punishment causal cause claim compatibilism conceived conception consciousness cosmological argument Cultural Relativism culture death penalty deny depends determinism doubt dualism duty eliminative materialism equal Ethical Egoism evidence evil example existence experience explain fact false feel fetus Further Reflection give happiness human idea identity imagine interpretive communities J. P. Moreland justice justified kind knowledge live matter means Meletus ment mental mind moral murder nature never Noseeum notion objects pain perceived person PHIL philosophy physical pleasure position possible premises principle problem properly basic proposition rational reason relativism Rorty sceptic seems sense social society Socrates soul strong AI Study Questions suppose theism theory things thought tion true truth understand universe virtue words wrong
References to this book
Embracing History's Lessons: What Every College Graduate Should Know Jay R. Allgood No preview available - 2004 |
Embracing History's Lessons: What Every College Graduate Should Know Jay R. Allgood No preview available - 2004 |