Philosophy: The Quest for Truth |
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Page 193
... tion that might be deployed against this sugges- tion are held by Rorty to beg the question by as- suming the standpoint of traditional philosophy . For instance , any argument that proceeds by ref- erence to the meaning of ' true ' or ...
... tion that might be deployed against this sugges- tion are held by Rorty to beg the question by as- suming the standpoint of traditional philosophy . For instance , any argument that proceeds by ref- erence to the meaning of ' true ' or ...
Page 312
... tion . If , for a short time , each man was willing to examine his own peculiar actions , search out their true motives to discover their concatena- tion , he would remain convinced that the sen- timent he has of his natural free agency ...
... tion . If , for a short time , each man was willing to examine his own peculiar actions , search out their true motives to discover their concatena- tion , he would remain convinced that the sen- timent he has of his natural free agency ...
Page 480
... tion of the whole nation , the public power will lose its political character . Political power , prop- erly so called , is merely the organized power of one class for oppressing another . If the prole- tariat during its contest with ...
... tion of the whole nation , the public power will lose its political character . Political power , prop- erly so called , is merely the organized power of one class for oppressing another . If the prole- tariat during its contest with ...
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 |