Ideals: A Guide to Moral and Metaphysical Outlooks |
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Page 32
... virtue but fitness ( Renaissance virtue , ' virtu ' , virtue that is morality - free ) . The weak and the failures shall perish : first principle of our love of man . And they shall even be given every possible assistance . What is more ...
... virtue but fitness ( Renaissance virtue , ' virtu ' , virtue that is morality - free ) . The weak and the failures shall perish : first principle of our love of man . And they shall even be given every possible assistance . What is more ...
Page 63
... virtue - not justice un- qualified , but as it appears between one party and another . Hence we often find it regarded as the supreme virtue , ' more wonderful than evening or morning star ' and we have a proverb : All virtue is summed ...
... virtue - not justice un- qualified , but as it appears between one party and another . Hence we often find it regarded as the supreme virtue , ' more wonderful than evening or morning star ' and we have a proverb : All virtue is summed ...
Page 64
... virtue , while injustice , its opposite , is not a part but the whole of vice ... Our next subject must be friendship . This is necessary because such love has somewhat the character of a virtue , or at any rate involves virtue . Be ...
... virtue , while injustice , its opposite , is not a part but the whole of vice ... Our next subject must be friendship . This is necessary because such love has somewhat the character of a virtue , or at any rate involves virtue . Be ...
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