Philosophy in the Age of CrisisEleanor Kuykendall |
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Page 28
... become a uni- versal law ' . Now if all imperatives of duty can be derived from this one imperative as their principle , then even although we leave it unsettled whether what we call duty may not be an empty concept , we shall still be ...
... become a uni- versal law ' . Now if all imperatives of duty can be derived from this one imperative as their principle , then even although we leave it unsettled whether what we call duty may not be an empty concept , we shall still be ...
Page 100
... become his executioner , and that no definition authorizes him ever to become one . His right to this certainty is absolute , and so is his right to his own body with all its organs . Absolute respect for these rights violates no one ...
... become his executioner , and that no definition authorizes him ever to become one . His right to this certainty is absolute , and so is his right to his own body with all its organs . Absolute respect for these rights violates no one ...
Page 122
... become latent , but can easily become conscious again . We might also say that they had become unconscious , if it were at all certain that in the condition of latency they are still something psychical . So far we should have learnt ...
... become latent , but can easily become conscious again . We might also say that they had become unconscious , if it were at all certain that in the condition of latency they are still something psychical . So far we should have learnt ...
Contents
Plato The Trial and Death of Socrates | 5 |
Immanuel Kant Treating Others as Persons not Things | 28 |
J Glenn Gray War Guilt | 39 |
Copyright | |
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action ahimsa anger animal Anytus argument assertions Auschwitz become behavior believe bodily body cause Christian colour colour-blind communication concept consciousness Crito David Hume death deceived desire doubt emotion ethical evil example existence expression fact faith feel force freedom Friedrich Nietzsche Friedrich Waismann Gandhi give human language idea illocutionary acts imagine Immanuel Kant individual Jean-Paul Sartre Jews judgments kind knowledge lives means Meletus mental merely metaphysical mind moral mystical native nature never Noam Chomsky nonviolent object observation pain particular perceive perception person philosophical possible principle problem propositions psychedelic psychedelic drugs psychedelic experience question reason relation René Descartes responsible rules satyagraha scientific seems sensation sense sentence sexual social society Socrates someone speak super-ego suppose theodicy theory things Thou thought tion truth understand universal violence words York