On the Ethics of NaturalismW. Blackwood and Sons, 1885 - 292 páginas |
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Página 17
... become what it now is through a long process of interaction between organism and environment , in which social as well as psychical and physical facts have influenced the result . This is the view to the elaboration of which Comte and 1 ...
... become what it now is through a long process of interaction between organism and environment , in which social as well as psychical and physical facts have influenced the result . This is the view to the elaboration of which Comte and 1 ...
Página 29
... become identified with the wider interests of the community . this ambi- guity , The different significations of which it admits Result of show that the psychological law that action follows the greatest pleasure is by no means so clear ...
... become identified with the wider interests of the community . this ambi- guity , The different significations of which it admits Result of show that the psychological law that action follows the greatest pleasure is by no means so clear ...
Página 32
... become apparent . The " video meliora proboque , deteriora sequor " ex- presses too common an experience to be so easily explained away . The impulses by which action is governed are not always in accordance with what the intellect ...
... become apparent . The " video meliora proboque , deteriora sequor " ex- presses too common an experience to be so easily explained away . The impulses by which action is governed are not always in accordance with what the intellect ...
Página 34
... become motives by being not merely recognised ( intellectually ) but felt ( emotionally ) —that is , by themselves becoming pleasurable or painful . If the Egoist calls any action irrational , it cannot be because the motive which ...
... become motives by being not merely recognised ( intellectually ) but felt ( emotionally ) —that is , by themselves becoming pleasurable or painful . If the Egoist calls any action irrational , it cannot be because the motive which ...
Página 35
... the actual experience of it . But , if the " pleas- ures of the imagination " are as strong as those of sense or of reality , the latter obviously become which ent with of voluntary action . superfluous ; and it EGOISM . 35.
... the actual experience of it . But , if the " pleas- ures of the imagination " are as strong as those of sense or of reality , the latter obviously become which ent with of voluntary action . superfluous ; and it EGOISM . 35.
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Palavras e frases frequentes
activity admit affections altruistic attempt balance of pleasure Bentham complete connected conscious constitution course Data of Ethics definite desire determine difficulty distinction doctrine egoistic empirical end of conduct ethical end evolutionism evolutionist experience external fact follows function George Grote greatest happiness greatest pleasure harmony hedonistic human nature Hutcheson Ibid idea ideal implies impulses increase individual interests internal sanction J. S. Mill kind Legislation logical look means ment mental merely Methods of Ethics Mill mind modified moral sense motive natural selection notion object organism philosophy pleasure and pain pleasure or pain point of view political present principle Professor Bain progress psychological Egoism psychological hedonism question rational realisation reason recognised reference regarded relation Science of Ethics seems self-consciousness selfish sentiment social society Spencer standard sympathy teleological tend tendency theory of evolution things tion unity utilitarianism vidual W. K. Clifford whole