Ethics: Inventing Right and WrongPenguin, 1977 - 249 páginas |
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Página 48
... actual goal of human striving . To meet these difficulties , the objectivist may have recourse to the purpose of God : the true purpose of human life is fixed by what God intended ( or , intends ) men to do and to be . Actual human ...
... actual goal of human striving . To meet these difficulties , the objectivist may have recourse to the purpose of God : the true purpose of human life is fixed by what God intended ( or , intends ) men to do and to be . Actual human ...
Página 93
... actual points of view , a point of view being now defined not just by the mental and physical qual- ities someone has and the situation in which he is placed , but also by his tastes , ideals , and so on . But now , even more than at ...
... actual points of view , a point of view being now defined not just by the mental and physical qual- ities someone has and the situation in which he is placed , but also by his tastes , ideals , and so on . But now , even more than at ...
Página 154
... actual interests , conflicts would be very thoroughly resolved ; but this is not necessary in order to counter the ... actual condition is , but also no matter what one's actual ideals and values are . This may be too much to hope for ...
... actual interests , conflicts would be very thoroughly resolved ; but this is not necessary in order to counter the ... actual condition is , but also no matter what one's actual ideals and values are . This may be too much to hope for ...
Índice
Patterns of objectification | 42 |
Good in moral contexts | 59 |
The meaning of ought | 73 |
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Términos y frases comunes
accept action actual agent agreement argued argument believe called causal Chapter choice claim commendation concepts concern consequences considerations course demands descriptive desires determinism discussion dispositions distinction effect equal ethics example fact fairly follow function further give given happiness holds human ideals imperative important individual institution intended interests intrinsic keep kind least leaves less limited logical matter maxims means merely moral moral judgements motives narrow natural notion objective objective values ordinary particular perhaps person point of view positive possible practical prescriptive present principle promising purely question rational reason reference relations requirements responsibility result rules satisfy seems sense similar simply situation social someone sort speaking specific stage standards statements subjective suggested supposed theory thesis things third thought true universalizable universalization utilitarianism utility values virtue wrong