Study in the Psychology of EthicsBlackwood, 1903 - 176 páginas |
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Página xiii
... individual must gradually discover his essential nature by observing the way in which he reacts on different occasions . This would not be the case if his tendencies were purely hedonic . It is obvious that ethics , no less than ...
... individual must gradually discover his essential nature by observing the way in which he reacts on different occasions . This would not be the case if his tendencies were purely hedonic . It is obvious that ethics , no less than ...
Página xiv
... expressed by saying that the individual is a psycho- physical organism . This seems to be the only work- 1 Psychologie des Idées - forces , p . xvi . ing hypothesis which does not do violence to the facts xiv INTRODUCTION .
... expressed by saying that the individual is a psycho- physical organism . This seems to be the only work- 1 Psychologie des Idées - forces , p . xvi . ing hypothesis which does not do violence to the facts xiv INTRODUCTION .
Página xv
... individual , and much more the same race , may behave very differently at different epochs . There may have been no fundamental change of character , but a different phase or mood of it may have been evoked by special circumstances ...
... individual , and much more the same race , may behave very differently at different epochs . There may have been no fundamental change of character , but a different phase or mood of it may have been evoked by special circumstances ...
Página 4
... individual who is composed psychically of cognition , pleasure - pain , and conation , and possesses no characteristics which cannot be expressed in terms of these . Such a being , when injured , might judge it advisable to retaliate ...
... individual who is composed psychically of cognition , pleasure - pain , and conation , and possesses no characteristics which cannot be expressed in terms of these . Such a being , when injured , might judge it advisable to retaliate ...
Página 5
... individual's own body has nothing in common with a feeling which relates the individual to an object . As this imaginary individual would be destitute of all malevolent feeling , he would likewise be incap- able of affection or ...
... individual's own body has nothing in common with a feeling which relates the individual to an object . As this imaginary individual would be destitute of all malevolent feeling , he would likewise be incap- able of affection or ...
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activity admiration agent anger arise aroused assert attained Author basal tendencies character Cheap Edition Church Church of Scotland circumstances cloth cognition conation conduct consciousness consequences constitute Crown 8vo Demy 8vo desire determined direct distinct Dumfries and Galloway Edinburgh element emotion essential ethical event evident excitement existence fact Fcap fear feeling in reference feeling-attitude French morocco function hate hedonic effect Histories of Scotland human ideal of worth ideas ill-feeling implies impulses individual influence instinct intellectual interests J. G. Lockhart JAMES JOHN kindly feeling LL.D manifest Maps mental moral nature necessarily numerous Illustrations object occasions OLIPHANT organic sensation particular person physical pleasure-pain pleasures and pains Portraits possible Post 8vo presupposes primary tendencies principle Professor psychical psychology reaction realise recognised regard result Revised scorn Scotland Second Edition sense tendencies to action theory things Third Edition tion University University of Edinburgh University of Glasgow vols William Blackwood
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