Philosophy: The Quest for Truth |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 81
Page 70
... nature of God ? 3. What does Pascal say regarding those who blame Christians for not producing evidence or proofs for the existence of God ? Can God's existence be proved ? Why or why not ? 4. What is the wager Pascal advocates , and ...
... nature of God ? 3. What does Pascal say regarding those who blame Christians for not producing evidence or proofs for the existence of God ? Can God's existence be proved ? Why or why not ? 4. What is the wager Pascal advocates , and ...
Page 406
... natural relationship between people in the state of nature ? Describe the state of nature . Are Hobbes ' examples appropriate ? 3. Does the notion of justice have any application in the state of nature ? Why or why not ? 4. What is ...
... natural relationship between people in the state of nature ? Describe the state of nature . Are Hobbes ' examples appropriate ? 3. Does the notion of justice have any application in the state of nature ? Why or why not ? 4. What is ...
Page 416
... nature and the state of nature , Locke is not so pessimistic as Hobbes . Whereas Hobbes saw the state of nature as one in which life was “ solitary , poor , nasty , brutish , and short , ” “ a war of all against all , " Locke sees it as ...
... nature and the state of nature , Locke is not so pessimistic as Hobbes . Whereas Hobbes saw the state of nature as one in which life was “ solitary , poor , nasty , brutish , and short , ” “ a war of all against all , " Locke sees it as ...
Contents
Socratic Wisdom 2 Bertrand Russell The Value of Philosophy Suggestions for Further Reading Part II Philosophy of Religion Introduction Can we pr... | 1 |
A Critique of the Cosmological Argument | 2 |
The Watch and the Watchmaker | 3 |
Copyright | |
24 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
absurd action animals answer argues argument believe Bertrand Russell body bourgeoisie brain called capital punishment causal cause Christian claim compatibilism conceived conception consciousness consider cosmological argument course culture David Hume death penalty deny determinism doubt duty equal Ethical Egoism ethical relativism evidence evil example existence experience fact feel fetus Further Reflection give happiness human idea imagine infinite J. P. Moreland judgment justice kind knowledge libertarian live matter mean Meletus ment mental mind mind-body problem moral murder nature never notion object pain Parfit perceived perhaps personal identity Phil philosophy physical pleasure possible principle priori problem properly basic proposition rational reason relativism religion seems sense society Socrates soul speciesism Study Questions suppose theism theory things thought tion true truth understand universe utilitarian virtue Weirob words wrong