Ethics: Inventing Right and WrongPenguin, 1977 - 249 páginas |
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Resultados 1-3 de 24
Página 79
... speaking within the institution . There would be no great difficulty in constructing an argument parallel to Searle's , starting , say , with the premiss ' Smith is starving on Jones's doorstep ' and ending with ' Jones ought to give ...
... speaking within the institution . There would be no great difficulty in constructing an argument parallel to Searle's , starting , say , with the premiss ' Smith is starving on Jones's doorstep ' and ending with ' Jones ought to give ...
Página 80
... speaking too casually about institutions and their requirements , about endorsing one or other of these , and about speaking within an institution ; it may be thought that some further account of these is called for . However , the re ...
... speaking too casually about institutions and their requirements , about endorsing one or other of these , and about speaking within an institution ; it may be thought that some further account of these is called for . However , the re ...
Página 81
... speak within an institution is to use its characteristic concepts , to assert or appeal to or im- plicitly invoke its rules and principles , in fact to speak in those distinctive ways by speaking and thinking in which the par- ticipants ...
... speak within an institution is to use its characteristic concepts , to assert or appeal to or im- plicitly invoke its rules and principles , in fact to speak in those distinctive ways by speaking and thinking in which the par- ticipants ...
Índice
Patterns of objectification | 42 |
Good in moral contexts | 59 |
The meaning of ought | 73 |
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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