On the Ethics of NaturalismW. Blackwood and Sons, 1885 - 292 páginas |
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Página 34
... equally certain ; and that therefore to act as if it were is to act unreasonably . Man fails in acting up to rea- son in this sense , because his action is not motived by reason , but directly by pleasure and pain ; and not by a mere ...
... equally certain ; and that therefore to act as if it were is to act unreasonably . Man fails in acting up to rea- son in this sense , because his action is not motived by reason , but directly by pleasure and pain ; and not by a mere ...
Página 39
... equally following the course of action which either ( a ) will bring , or ( b ) seems to him likely to bring , the greatest pleas- ure , or ( c ) is actually most pleasant at the time . From the nature of the individual we can evolve no ...
... equally following the course of action which either ( a ) will bring , or ( b ) seems to him likely to bring , the greatest pleas- ure , or ( c ) is actually most pleasant at the time . From the nature of the individual we can evolve no ...
Página 52
... equally valid application to all who adopt the same general line of thought . For Bentham appears to have seen as clearly as any of his disciples the difficulty of bring- ing the egoistic basis of his theory of human nature into harmony ...
... equally valid application to all who adopt the same general line of thought . For Bentham appears to have seen as clearly as any of his disciples the difficulty of bring- ing the egoistic basis of his theory of human nature into harmony ...
Página 72
... equally . Every one whom our conduct may be made to affect is to count as a unit , and a unit only . The distribution is not to be according to kinship of blood or social ties , though it is so much afterwards unequally developed by ...
... equally . Every one whom our conduct may be made to affect is to count as a unit , and a unit only . The distribution is not to be according to kinship of blood or social ties , though it is so much afterwards unequally developed by ...
Página 103
... equally ) ; and its reference to the ends which those actions or the exercise of these affections may ultimately tend to would , therefore , seem to be indirect.2 Butler was care- ful , moreover , not to speak of it as an aesthetic 1 ...
... equally ) ; and its reference to the ends which those actions or the exercise of these affections may ultimately tend to would , therefore , seem to be indirect.2 Butler was care- ful , moreover , not to speak of it as an aesthetic 1 ...
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Términos y frases comunes
action admit attempt Author Bentham Cheaper Edition Church of Scotland cloth complete conscious course Crown 8vo Data of Ethics Demy 8vo desire determine distinction doctrine egoistic empirical end of conduct environment Essays ethical end evolutionist experience external fact Fcap follows French morocco function greatest happiness greatest pleasure harmony hedonistic human nature Ibid idea ideal Illustrations implies impulses individual J. G. Lockhart J. S. Mill LL.D logical Maryton means ment mental Mill modified moral sense motive natural selection notion object organism Philosophy pleasure and pain pleasure or pain point of view political Portrait Post 8vo practical present principle Professor Bain progress psychological Egoism psychological hedonism question rational realisation reason regarded relation Revised Science of Ethics Scotland Second Edition seems selfish sentiment social society Spencer tend tendency theory of evolution things Third Edition tion University of Edinburgh utilitarianism vols whole
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