The Examined Life: An Adventure in Moral PhilosophyIndiana University Press, 1957 - 276 sider |
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Side 212
... least has no illusions of importance and has been spared the temptation to think of himself as other than he is . And yet again " the moral law within us " . My one purpose in this volume has been to present to the reader's imagination ...
... least has no illusions of importance and has been spared the temptation to think of himself as other than he is . And yet again " the moral law within us " . My one purpose in this volume has been to present to the reader's imagination ...
Side 255
... least recognized in his own country and his own house , and that husband and wife , father and son , may be least fitted to know one another ? And it may help to link the logic of our neighbour's presence with that of the divine ...
... least recognized in his own country and his own house , and that husband and wife , father and son , may be least fitted to know one another ? And it may help to link the logic of our neighbour's presence with that of the divine ...
Side 263
... least of the more vulgar and commonplace sort . I have in mind a charming illustration of a passage in Kingsley's " Water Babies " in which Tom , the Water Baby , " looked up at the broad yellow moon . . . and he thought that she looked ...
... least of the more vulgar and commonplace sort . I have in mind a charming illustration of a passage in Kingsley's " Water Babies " in which Tom , the Water Baby , " looked up at the broad yellow moon . . . and he thought that she looked ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
aesthetic animal answer Aristotle artist authority beauty Bishop Butler categorical imperative chapter conceive conception consciousness criticism Croce difference distinction divine enjoy enjoyment Epicurean Epicurus ethics expression fact feeling George Eliot grasp Greek honest human nature idea ideal illusion imagination impression insight intelligence interesting J. S. Mill James Fitzjames Stephen Kant knowledge least less literature living logic Lucretius Machiavellian mark marriage matter means merely mind modern moral philosophy moralist motive never objective order of reverence ordered society orthodox morality perhaps picture Plato poetry point of view possible pragmatic attitude present problem Professor Dewey psychology purpose question reality reflective relation religion religious reveal reverence scientific seems self-consciousness sense significance simple social Socrates soul spirit standard suggest suppose suspect T. H. Green taste theory things thought tion tradition true truth utilitarian utility virtue wonder words