Once for all they conceived and expressed the conception of a free or pure morality, as resting on what we may venture to call a disinterested interest in the good ; of the several virtues as so many applications of that interest to the main relations... The Philosophy of Thomas Hill Green - ˹éÒ 90â´Â William Henry Fairbrother - 1900 - 187 ˹éÒÁØÁÁͧ·Ñé§àÅèÁ - à¡ÕèÂǡѺ˹ѧÊ×ÍàÅèÁ¹Õé
| Thomas Hill Green - 1883 - 516 ˹éÒ
...conceived and expressed the conception of a free or pure morality, as resting on what we may venture to call a disinterested interest in the good ; of the...and vital moral conviction which has descended to us. It had indeed still to acquire fulness and determinateness with the formation of habits and institutions... | |
| Thomas Hill Green - 1888 - 684 ˹éÒ
...conceived and expressed the conception of a free or pure morality, as resting on what we may venture to call a disinterested interest in the good ; of the...exercised in its pursuit, but as their full realisation. . . When we come to ask ourselves what are the essential forms in which, however otherwise modified,... | |
| Thomas Hill Green - 1890 - 480 ˹éÒ
...what we may venture X» call a disinterested^interest in the good ; of the several virtues aS~«o. many applications of that interest to the main relations...realisation. This idea was one which was to govern JJie growth of all the true and vital moral conviction which has descended to us. It had indeed sfci'l... | |
| Benjamin Chapman Burt - 1892 - 346 ˹éÒ
...conceived and expressed the conceptions of a free or pure morality as resting on what we may venture to call a disinterested interest in the good; of the...virtuously exercised in its pursuit, but as their full realization." The differences between our standards of virtue and those recognized by the Greek philosophers... | |
| Richard Lewis Nettleship - 1906 - 282 ˹éÒ
...conceived and expressed the conception of a free or pure morality, as resting on what we may venture to call a disinterested interest in the good ; of the...exercised in its pursuit, but as their full realisation. . . . When we come to ask ourselves what are the essential forms in which, however otherwise modified,... | |
| Frank M. Turner - 1984 - 496 ˹éÒ
...conceived and expressed the conception of a free or pure morality, as resting on what we may venture to call a disinterested interest in the good; of the...exercised in its pursuit, but as their full realisation. That concept of pure disinterested moral conduct had informed "all the true and vital moral conviction"... | |
| Bart Schultz - 2002 - 444 ˹éÒ
...conceived and expressed the conception of a free or pure morality, as resting on what we may venture to call a disinterested interest in the good; of the...virtuously exercised in its pursuit, but as their full realization. (Prol., 253) He recognizes that this statement of the general principle of morality offers... | |
| 1941 - 248 ˹éÒ
...conceived and expressed the conception of a free or pure morality, as resting on what we may venture to call a disinterested interest in the good; of the...exercised in its pursuit, but as their full realisation.. . .When we come to ask ourselves what are the essential forms in which, however otherwise modified,... | |
| Sir Richard Winn Livingstone - 184 ˹éÒ
...conceived and expressed the conception of a free or pure morality, as resting on what we may venture to call a disinterested interest in the good ; of the...exercised in its pursuit, but as their full realisation. . . . When we come to ask ourselves what are the essential forms in which, however otherwise modified,... | |
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