Value and Man: Readings in Philosophy |
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Page 90
... hold fast to righteousness . Below them sinful creatures have their proper order . By their sins they have lost happiness , but they have not lost the capacity to recover it . Herein they are superior to those creatures whose will is to ...
... hold fast to righteousness . Below them sinful creatures have their proper order . By their sins they have lost happiness , but they have not lost the capacity to recover it . Herein they are superior to those creatures whose will is to ...
Page 119
... hold that revelation is not completed . in the sense of being ended . But religions hold that the essential framework is settled in its significant moral features at least , and that new elements that are offered must be judged by ...
... hold that revelation is not completed . in the sense of being ended . But religions hold that the essential framework is settled in its significant moral features at least , and that new elements that are offered must be judged by ...
Page 138
... hold that we discern the rightness or wrongness of specific acts ; others limit our judgment to certain types of acts ; and still others , notably Immanuel Kant , hold that we recognize one supreme moral law from which we justify ...
... hold that we discern the rightness or wrongness of specific acts ; others limit our judgment to certain types of acts ; and still others , notably Immanuel Kant , hold that we recognize one supreme moral law from which we justify ...
Contents
Knowledge as recollection The divided line | 5 |
Causality Free Will and Determinism | 31 |
A defense of necessary connection | 40 |
Copyright | |
23 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
A. J. Ayer action Anytus argument Aristotle artist assertion Athenians beauty become behavior believe called capital punishment causal cause character common conceived concepts concerned culture death Descartes desire distinction divine doctrine effect emotion ence Epicurus ethical evidence evil existence experience explain expression fact false feeling give happiness human Iago idea individual judgment kind knowledge labour language laws logic mankind matter means means of production Meletus ment metaphysical mind moral motive nature never norms object opinion Othello passions person philosophers physical Plato pleasure poet possible principle problem production proposition punishment question R. G. Collingwood reason regard relation religion religious Rudolf Carnap scientific scientific method scientists sense social society Socrates soul speak statement suppose theonomous theory things thought tion Tragedy true truth understand University utilitarian verifiability virtue whole words