Ethics: Inventing Right and WrongPenguin, 1977 - 249 páginas |
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Resultados 1-3 de 38
Página 65
... someone tries to move ( in what would otherwise be the correct way ) a rook which is pinned against his king by an enemy bishop , one might say that he must not , or can't , do that . If someone is thinking of moving a rook which is ...
... someone tries to move ( in what would otherwise be the correct way ) a rook which is pinned against his king by an enemy bishop , one might say that he must not , or can't , do that . If someone is thinking of moving a rook which is ...
Página 196
... someone really wants and seriously asks to be killed , with some understandable reason . It is a more difficult question whether it is ever legitimate to act on someone's merely presumed desire for his life to be ended : I think the ...
... someone really wants and seriously asks to be killed , with some understandable reason . It is a more difficult question whether it is ever legitimate to act on someone's merely presumed desire for his life to be ended : I think the ...
Página 211
... someone for something for which he cannot be blamed . This provides an initially plausible case for the straight rule . But what are we to say about divergences from it ? There is , indeed , some tendency for the law to move closer to ...
... someone for something for which he cannot be blamed . This provides an initially plausible case for the straight rule . But what are we to say about divergences from it ? There is , indeed , some tendency for the law to move closer to ...
Índice
Patterns of objectification | 42 |
Good in moral contexts | 59 |
The meaning of ought | 73 |
Página de créditos | |
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Términos y frases comunes
absolute accept act utilitarianism agent agreement argued argument argument from queerness believe broad sense called categorical imperative causal causal determinism Chapter chosen end claim to objectivity commendation compatibilism concepts conflict consequences consequentialist constraints deontology descriptive meaning desires determinism dispositions distinction egoism endorse ethics eudaimonia example fact fairly game theory happiness Hobbes human Hume Hume's Hume's Law hypothetical imperative ideals institution interests intrinsic kind logical thesis maxims meaning of moral merely moral judgements moral scepticism moral system moral terms moral thought moral values motives narrow sense natural notion objective values obliquely intended one's open question argument order moral particular perhaps person point of view premiss principle promising Protagoras question R.M. Hare rational relations requirements responsibility rule utilitarian satisfy second effect second stage social someone sort stage of universalization straight rule subjectivism supposed theory things third stage tion universalizable utility virtue wrong