The Enduring Questions: Main Problems of PhilosophyHolt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1980 - 630 páginas |
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Página 419
... action that is done from duty gets its moral value , not from the object which it is intended to secure , but from the maxim by which it is determined . Accordingly , the action has the same moral value whether the object is attained or ...
... action that is done from duty gets its moral value , not from the object which it is intended to secure , but from the maxim by which it is determined . Accordingly , the action has the same moral value whether the object is attained or ...
Página 423
... action which is obligatory according to the principle of a will that is in some sense good . If the action is good only because it is a means to something else , the impera- tive is hypothetical ; if the action is con- ceived to be good ...
... action which is obligatory according to the principle of a will that is in some sense good . If the action is good only because it is a means to something else , the impera- tive is hypothetical ; if the action is con- ceived to be good ...
Página 424
... action , without presupposing as its condition that some other end is to be attained by means of that action . This imperative is cate- gorical . It has to do , not with the matter of an action and the result expected to follow from it ...
... action , without presupposing as its condition that some other end is to be attained by means of that action . This imperative is cate- gorical . It has to do , not with the matter of an action and the result expected to follow from it ...
Contenido
Preface | 1 |
KNOWLEDGE AND REALITY | 7 |
IDEALISM | 167 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 17 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
abstract action animals Anytus appear argument Aristotle B. F. Skinner believe body called categorical imperative cause ceived certainly colors conceive conception consequences consider deny Descartes desire determined distinct doctrine doubt duty effect Ernest Nagel ethics everything existence existentialist experience external fact false feel Glaucon happiness Hegel Hence human Hume idea ideal imagination imperative individual inference John Stuart Mill Kant kind knowledge living logical Martin Buber matter means Meletus ment mental metaphysics method mind monism moral motion nature necessity ness never objects opinion pain Peirce perceived perceptions person Phil philosophy physical Plato pleasure possible principle produce propositions pure question rational reality reason regard relation rule scientific scientific method seems sensation sense sense-data social Socrates soul space suppose theory things thou thought tion true truth University utilitarian virtue whole word