Man-made Morals: Four Philosophies that Shaped AmericaDoubleday, 1966 - 412 Seiten |
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Seite 43
... thought , many of the disciples took the striking but superficial aspects of Shaftesbury's thought and ignored the foundations . To many of them morals are a matter of instinct and a branch of aesthetics . The disciples did not teach ...
... thought , many of the disciples took the striking but superficial aspects of Shaftesbury's thought and ignored the foundations . To many of them morals are a matter of instinct and a branch of aesthetics . The disciples did not teach ...
Seite 162
... thought in his letters about religion is Unitarian , but the poetic phraseology is dis- tinctively of New England ... thought of Adams differs from the social and political thought of his favored corre- spondent of the twilight years ...
... thought in his letters about religion is Unitarian , but the poetic phraseology is dis- tinctively of New England ... thought of Adams differs from the social and political thought of his favored corre- spondent of the twilight years ...
Seite 262
... thought was decidedly British . I , alone of our number , had come upon the threshing - floor of philosophy through the doorway of Kant , and even my ideas were acquiring the English accent . " The significance of the British cast of ...
... thought was decidedly British . I , alone of our number , had come upon the threshing - floor of philosophy through the doorway of Kant , and even my ideas were acquiring the English accent . " The significance of the British cast of ...
Inhalt
The Dawn of Reason 146 | 1 |
Natural Religion | 11 |
Whatever Is Is Right | 29 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accepted action acts Adams American believed Bolingbroke Brandeis Brandeis brief Burke Cambridge Charles Peirce Chauncey Wright Church civil classical economics concept Constitution conviction deism deists divinely created order doctrine eighteenth century England English Essay ethical exists experience fact Filmer Founding Fathers France Franklin freedom fundamental Godwin greatest happiness greatest number Hamilton Hence Herbert Spencer Hobbes Holmes human Hume Hutcheson Huxley Ibid idea individual instinct intellectual James Mill Jefferson Jeremy Bentham John Dewey John Locke Justice laissez faire liberal liberty Locke logical Macaulay Madison man-made order man's Mandeville mind Montesquieu moral sense natural law never Paine pattern Peirce philosophy political pragmatism pragmatist principle progress reason reform religion religious Revolution school of Rousseau Shaftesbury skepticism social Darwinians social Darwinism society Spencer spirit Sumner Supreme Court theory things thinking Thomas thought tion truth University Press utilitarian viewpoint virtue William James wrote York