Basic Problems of PhilosophyDaniel J. Bronstein, Yervant Hovhannes Krikorian, Philip Paul Wiener |
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Page 146
... result , his analysis showed there were no eternal laws of economics or politics as the classical school of Adam Smith and his followers assumed . Though Locke and Ricardo had pointed out how the exchange value of commodities and land ...
... result , his analysis showed there were no eternal laws of economics or politics as the classical school of Adam Smith and his followers assumed . Though Locke and Ricardo had pointed out how the exchange value of commodities and land ...
Page 167
... result of our re- flections . Without rhetorical exagger- ation , a simply truthful combination of the miseries that have overwhelmed the noblest of nations and polities , and the finest exemplars of private virtue - forms a picture of ...
... result of our re- flections . Without rhetorical exagger- ation , a simply truthful combination of the miseries that have overwhelmed the noblest of nations and polities , and the finest exemplars of private virtue - forms a picture of ...
Page 304
... result from the operation of that cause . When I see , for instance , a billiard ball moving in a straight line towards another ; even suppose motion in the second ball should by accident be suggested to me , as the result of their ...
... result from the operation of that cause . When I see , for instance , a billiard ball moving in a straight line towards another ; even suppose motion in the second ball should by accident be suggested to me , as the result of their ...
Contents
METHODOLOGY Introduction | 1 |
The Spirit of Oriental Ethical | 14 |
Republic I | 17 |
Copyright | |
69 other sections not shown
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absolute action actual aesthetic analysis argument Aristotle assert beauty believe body bourgeoisie called causal cause cerned conceived conception conscious cosmological argument Descartes desire doctrine doubt egocentric predicament emotion empirical ence eral ethical evil example existence existentialists experience expression external fact feeling G. B. Halsted give Glaucon happiness Hegel human nature hypothesis ical idea ideal imagination individual intuition judgment kind knowledge laws logical logical positivism losophy matter means ment mental merely metaphysics method mind moral never object observation opinion perceive person philoso philosophy physical Plato pleasure political possible practical present principle problem proposition question reality reason regard relation religion religious rience scientific scientific method seems sion social Socrates soul suppose symbols tain theism theology theory things thought Thrasymachus tical tion true truth ture understanding universal verifiable words