An Introduction to Modern Philosophy in Six Philosophical Problems |
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Page 195
... judgment . In judgment the mind takes its ideas to agree or disagree ( or , which is the same , any proposition to be true or false ) without perceiving a demonstrative evidence in the proofs . The mind sometimes exercises this judg ...
... judgment . In judgment the mind takes its ideas to agree or disagree ( or , which is the same , any proposition to be true or false ) without perceiving a demonstrative evidence in the proofs . The mind sometimes exercises this judg ...
Page 225
... judgment is thought with strict uni- versality and necessity so that no exception is admitted as possible , it cannot have been derived from experience . We have here a mystery . We must discover the ground of a priori judgments . We ...
... judgment is thought with strict uni- versality and necessity so that no exception is admitted as possible , it cannot have been derived from experience . We have here a mystery . We must discover the ground of a priori judgments . We ...
Page 313
... judgment make any difference , and suppose it could have been omitted ? The moral judgment says it ought to have been omitted . How can this be ? How can a man be called free , at the same mo- ment and with respect to the same act in ...
... judgment make any difference , and suppose it could have been omitted ? The moral judgment says it ought to have been omitted . How can this be ? How can a man be called free , at the same mo- ment and with respect to the same act in ...
Contents
AN ACCOUNT OF THIS BOOK | 1 |
A METAPHYSICAL PROBLEM | 8 |
from George | 123 |
Copyright | |
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action appear argued argument believe BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE body bourgeoisie called categorical imperative cause citations civil claim commonwealth conception constitution criticism culture David Hume Descartes distinction doctrine duty ethical evil existence experience external fact feeling fiction follow freedom genealogy of morals God's ground happiness Hegel Hobbes human Hume hypothesis ideal ideas Immanuel Kant individual J. S. Mill James John Stuart Mill Kant Kant's king knowledge liberty mankind Marx master morality matter means ment metaphysics Mill mind modern moralist morality natural theology Nietzsche notion object obligation organization Paley passions persons philosophy philosophy of history political possible principle priori problem production proletariat rational READING QUESTIONS READING REFERENCES reality reason religion revolution rule Schopenhauer sense skepticism social society sovereign sovereignty Spengler spirit theism theory things thought tion transvaluation of values true truth universe whole words world history