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- 00069475 contributor B65502.
- 00069475 created "2001.".
- 00069475 date "2001".
- 00069475 date "2001.".
- 00069475 dateCopyrighted "2001.".
- 00069475 description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 167-172) and index.".
- 00069475 description "Machine generated contents note: Introduction -- 1. Green's view of the method of moral philosophy -- 2. Husserl's critique of the sciences -- 3. Linking the phenomenological reduction to a theory of -- human practice -- 4. Applying the phenomenological reduction to moral -- philosophy -- 1 Green's Transcendental Theory of Human Practice -- 1.1 Defining the term 'transcendental' -- 1.2 Green's metaphysics of knowledge -- 1.3 Hume's discovery of the 'world of spirit' -- 1.4 The spiritual principle that underpins human -- practice, or Green's theory of the will -- 1.5 Why Green's principle is in fact a transcendental rule -- 1.6 Applications of Green's transcendental rule -- 1.7 The difference between transcendentalism and spiritual -- determinism -- 2 Green's Phenomenological Moral Theory -- 2.1 Similarities between Green and the utilitarians -- 2.2 The difference between the pursuit of pleasure -- and the pursuit of the moral good -- 2.3 The moral ideal as the perfection of man -- 2.4 The phenomenological circle -- 2.5 The change of perspective -- 2.6 Between deontology and consequentialism -- 2.7 Is it the individual or her perfection that is an end in -- itself? -- vii -- 2.8 Moral vulnerability and negative morality -- 2.9 Conclusion -- 3 Green's Theory of the Common Good -- 3.1 Outlining the two perspectives in defining the -- common good -- 3.2 The common good as personal moral growth -- 3.3 The salvation argument: criticisms and defence -- 3.4 The unique position of the self -- 3.5 The loss of the concept of the ordinary good -- 3.6 The common good in the second sense: as a society of -- equals -- 3.7 Conclusion -- 4 Positive and Negative Freedom: Green's -- Contribution to the Debate -- 4.1 Juristic freedom and moral freedom -- 4.2 Positive freedom and negative freedom -- 4.3 Which freedom is more important? -- 4.4 Conclusion -- 5 Rights in Green's Political Theory: Universal or -- Historical? -- 5.1 The concept of social recognition -- 5.2 Practical social recognition -- 5.3 Metaphysical social recognition -- 5.4 Green's theories of human agency and morality: -- need as a sufficient justification of rights -- 5.5 Rights as an expression of negative freedom: -- negative and positive morality -- 5.6 Rights - universal or historical? -- 5.7 Conclusion: reconciling the two lines of thought in -- Green's philosophy -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.".
- 00069475 extent "xiii, 175 p. ;".
- 00069475 identifier "0333914457".
- 00069475 identifier 00069475.html.
- 00069475 identifier 00069475.html.
- 00069475 identifier 00069475.html.
- 00069475 issued "2001".
- 00069475 issued "2001.".
- 00069475 language "eng".
- 00069475 publisher "Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire ; New York : Palgrave,".
- 00069475 subject "128/.4/092 21".
- 00069475 subject "Ethics, Modern.".
- 00069475 subject "Green, Thomas Hill, 1836-1882.".
- 00069475 subject "JC223.G8 T5 2001".
- 00069475 subject "Phenomenology.".
- 00069475 tableOfContents "Machine generated contents note: Introduction -- 1. Green's view of the method of moral philosophy -- 2. Husserl's critique of the sciences -- 3. Linking the phenomenological reduction to a theory of -- human practice -- 4. Applying the phenomenological reduction to moral -- philosophy -- 1 Green's Transcendental Theory of Human Practice -- 1.1 Defining the term 'transcendental' -- 1.2 Green's metaphysics of knowledge -- 1.3 Hume's discovery of the 'world of spirit' -- 1.4 The spiritual principle that underpins human -- practice, or Green's theory of the will -- 1.5 Why Green's principle is in fact a transcendental rule -- 1.6 Applications of Green's transcendental rule -- 1.7 The difference between transcendentalism and spiritual -- determinism -- 2 Green's Phenomenological Moral Theory -- 2.1 Similarities between Green and the utilitarians -- 2.2 The difference between the pursuit of pleasure -- and the pursuit of the moral good -- 2.3 The moral ideal as the perfection of man -- 2.4 The phenomenological circle -- 2.5 The change of perspective -- 2.6 Between deontology and consequentialism -- 2.7 Is it the individual or her perfection that is an end in -- itself? -- vii -- 2.8 Moral vulnerability and negative morality -- 2.9 Conclusion -- 3 Green's Theory of the Common Good -- 3.1 Outlining the two perspectives in defining the -- common good -- 3.2 The common good as personal moral growth -- 3.3 The salvation argument: criticisms and defence -- 3.4 The unique position of the self -- 3.5 The loss of the concept of the ordinary good -- 3.6 The common good in the second sense: as a society of -- equals -- 3.7 Conclusion -- 4 Positive and Negative Freedom: Green's -- Contribution to the Debate -- 4.1 Juristic freedom and moral freedom -- 4.2 Positive freedom and negative freedom -- 4.3 Which freedom is more important? -- 4.4 Conclusion -- 5 Rights in Green's Political Theory: Universal or -- Historical? -- 5.1 The concept of social recognition -- 5.2 Practical social recognition -- 5.3 Metaphysical social recognition -- 5.4 Green's theories of human agency and morality: -- need as a sufficient justification of rights -- 5.5 Rights as an expression of negative freedom: -- negative and positive morality -- 5.6 Rights - universal or historical? -- 5.7 Conclusion: reconciling the two lines of thought in -- Green's philosophy -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.".
- 00069475 title "T.H. Green's moral and political philosophy : a phenomenological perspective / Maria Dimova-Cookson.".
- 00069475 type "text".