The Origin and Development of the Moral Ideas, เล่มที่ 1Macmillan and Company, limited, 1924 |
จากด้านในหนังสือ
ผลการค้นหา 1 - 5 จาก 100
หน้า xi
... speaking , a person's will , or character , conceived as the cause either of volitions or of the absence of volitions , p . 214 sq . - Moral judg ments that are passed on emotions or opinions really refer to the will , p . 215 sq ...
... speaking , a person's will , or character , conceived as the cause either of volitions or of the absence of volitions , p . 214 sq . - Moral judg ments that are passed on emotions or opinions really refer to the will , p . 215 sq ...
หน้า 2
... speaking , too big for any man ; at any rate it is so for the writer of this book . Nothing like completeness can be aimed at . Hypotheses of varying degrees of probability must only too often be resorted to . Even the certainty of the ...
... speaking , too big for any man ; at any rate it is so for the writer of this book . Nothing like completeness can be aimed at . Hypotheses of varying degrees of probability must only too often be resorted to . Even the certainty of the ...
หน้า 5
... Speaking generally , the acts which are called right do promote , or are supposed to promote general happiness , and the acts which are called wrong do diminish , or are supposed to diminish it . I say , therefore , that this is what ...
... Speaking generally , the acts which are called right do promote , or are supposed to promote general happiness , and the acts which are called wrong do diminish , or are supposed to diminish it . I say , therefore , that this is what ...
หน้า 6
... speaking , an act is called good because it is approved of , and is approved of by an utilitarian in so far as it conduces to happiness . Such confusion of terms cannot affect the real meaning of the moral concepts . It is true that he ...
... speaking , an act is called good because it is approved of , and is approved of by an utilitarian in so far as it conduces to happiness . Such confusion of terms cannot affect the real meaning of the moral concepts . It is true that he ...
หน้า 8
... speaking , the tendency to regard them as objective is greater in proportion as the impres- sions vary less in each particular case . If " there is no disputing of tastes , " that is because taste is so extremely variable ; and yet even ...
... speaking , the tendency to regard them as objective is greater in proportion as the impres- sions vary less in each particular case . If " there is no disputing of tastes , " that is because taste is so extremely variable ; and yet even ...
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Aborigines According Africa Aleuts ancient animals Anthr Australian avenger Bedouins believe Benin blood blood-revenge cause child Christian Church civilisation Code committed common conduct considered crime criminal curse custom danger death deed duty Ellis enemy Eskimo Ethn fact father feeling Gratian Greenland guest guilty History History of Madagascar homicide honour human sacrifice husband ibid idea Idem India infanticide inflicted influence injury Inst instances Islanders Jour justice Kafirs killed Laws of Manu manslayer master ment Migne moral consciousness moral emotions moral judgments Morocco mother Muhammedan murder nations natives nature observes offender offered opinion pain parents Pausanias person Plato Plutarch principle punishment quoted races Recht recognised regarded religion resentment retributive revenge Roman rule sacrificed savage says slave slavery society Steinmetz Strafrecht stranger Studien suffering Teutonic tion tribes U.S. Exploring Expedition victim virtue volition whilst wife woman women wrong