British Moralists, Being Selections from Writers Principally of the Eighteenth Century, Band 2Sir Lewis Amherst Selby-Bigge Clarendon Press, 1897 |
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Seite 6
... Mankind , to assert , and not without some Subtilty indeavoured to prove , that there is no such real Difference originally , necessarily , and absolutely in the Nature of Things , but that all Obligation of Duty to God , arises merely ...
... Mankind , to assert , and not without some Subtilty indeavoured to prove , that there is no such real Difference originally , necessarily , and absolutely in the Nature of Things , but that all Obligation of Duty to God , arises merely ...
Seite 7
... Mankind . Which being undeniably a great and unsufferable Evil , Mr. Hobbes himself confesses it reason- able , that , to prevent this Evil , Men should enter into certain Compacts to preserve one another . Now if the destruction of Mankind ...
... Mankind . Which being undeniably a great and unsufferable Evil , Mr. Hobbes himself confesses it reason- able , that , to prevent this Evil , Men should enter into certain Compacts to preserve one another . Now if the destruction of Mankind ...
Seite 9
... Mankind , any more than the interest of one City or Family , in opposition to their Neighbours of the same Country : But those things only are truly good in their own Nature , which either tend to the universal benefit and welfare of ...
... Mankind , any more than the interest of one City or Family , in opposition to their Neighbours of the same Country : But those things only are truly good in their own Nature , which either tend to the universal benefit and welfare of ...
Seite 17
... Mankind . For no Man willingly and deliberately transgresses this Rule , in any great and considerable Instance , but he acts contrary to the Judgement and Reason of his own Mind , and secretly reproaches himself for so doing . And no ...
... Mankind . For no Man willingly and deliberately transgresses this Rule , in any great and considerable Instance , but he acts contrary to the Judgement and Reason of his own Mind , and secretly reproaches himself for so doing . And no ...
Seite 19
... Mankind , however industriously they endeavour to conceal and deny their self - condemnation , yet they cannot avoid making a discovery of it sometimes when they are not aware of it . For Example : There is no Man so vile and desperate ...
... Mankind , however industriously they endeavour to conceal and deny their self - condemnation , yet they cannot avoid making a discovery of it sometimes when they are not aware of it . For Example : There is no Man so vile and desperate ...
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absolute absurd Affection agreeable antecedent antecedent Law appear approve arise asserted Author beauty Benevolence BERNARD DE MANDEVILLE called cause Cive command concerning conformity consequently considered contrary creatures criterion degree Delight deny desire determine Disposition dist duty endeavour Enquiry equal esteem eternal evident evil Faculties Foundation happiness hath HENRY HOME human ideas imagine immutable indifferent instances Instinct JOHN BALGUY JOHN GAY Justice kind Law of Nature liberty Lond Love mankind manner Matter means meer Mind misery Moral Agent moral sense motive Natural Justice natures of things necessarily necessary notion Numbers objects obligation observed Origin of Virtue particular passions perceive perception plainly positive laws produce proper proposition Protagoras publick punishment rational rational agent Reason of Things rectitude regard Relations right and wrong rule self-love sensible shew suppose Supposition tion true truth understanding uneasiness universal Unjust vice Virtue virtuous World