Ideals: A Guide to Moral and Metaphysical Outlooks |
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Page 12
... kind . And there are certainly some people who use one kind much more than they use other kinds , and much more than other people use that kind . For instance , a Japanese soldier in the Second World War , or a gunfighter in a western ...
... kind . And there are certainly some people who use one kind much more than they use other kinds , and much more than other people use that kind . For instance , a Japanese soldier in the Second World War , or a gunfighter in a western ...
Page 21
... kind of language has its own purposes , which are not the purposes of any other kind . It is silly to write off one or more styles just because they are what they are , and it is important to see that different styles may be saying the ...
... kind of language has its own purposes , which are not the purposes of any other kind . It is silly to write off one or more styles just because they are what they are , and it is important to see that different styles may be saying the ...
Page 78
... kind of evidence gained from observation and experiment . “ Being reason- able " in morality and religion is not a matter ( a ) of constant ratiocination , nor ( b ) of applying the sort of evidence and techniques that are appropriate ...
... kind of evidence gained from observation and experiment . “ Being reason- able " in morality and religion is not a matter ( a ) of constant ratiocination , nor ( b ) of applying the sort of evidence and techniques that are appropriate ...
Contents
FOREWORD by the Reverend Canon Ronald H Preston | 8 |
A Selfobeying | 27 |
B Otherobeying | 37 |
Copyright | |
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Abraham Adam Bede advantage Aristotle Asshur authority behave believe benevolence better Bible Brothers Karamazov Buddhist Charles Gore choose Christian commands concerned conscience considering course divine earth Edwyn Bevan emotions Epictetus Epicurus ethics example external extracts faith fear follow four modes friends give guilt gunfighter happiness harm hath heaven honor human ideals and outlooks important inner feelings instance justice justifying kill Lakedaimon least live logical look matter mean metaphysical modes of thought Moral Education nature Nicomachean Ethics obey one's other-considering mode other-obeying mode ourselves particular passages people's interests person Philosophy Plato principle question R. M. Hare rational religious self-considering mode self-obeying mode sense sort soul style Summa Theologica talk Talmud Taoism thee thine things Thou shalt Troilus and Cressida truth universe unto virtue Wilson words