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- catalog contributor b2104611.
- catalog contributor b2104612.
- catalog created "1962, c1927.".
- catalog date "1962".
- catalog date "1962, c1927.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1962, c1927.".
- catalog description "I. The vulgar notion of responsibility in connexion [connection] with the theories of free-will and necessity : Object of the inquiry ; The common notion of responsibility, irreconcilable with 'freedom'; and with rational prediction ; Ground of the objection to rational prediction ; Common opinion and necessitarianism, irreconcilable as to punishment and responsibility ; Reason of this twofold ; Note A. compulsion and responsibility ; Note B. character, how far fixed ; Note C. freedom".
- catalog description "II. Why should I be moral? : Question rests on a dogmatic preconception, which is opposed to the moral consciousness, and is unreasonable ; The end is self-realization, as is shown from morality, and from psychological considerations ; It means realizing self as a whole, and an infinite whole ; Note to Essay II".
- catalog description "III. Pleasure for pleasure's sake : Happiness a vague phrase ; Common opinion on pleasure ; Hedonism irreconcilable with morality ; Illusory nature of the Hedonistic end ; My pleasure as the end gives no rule of life ; And the pleasure of all is illusory; opposed to morality, and gives no practical guidance, it is dogmatically postulated, and irreconcilable with Hedonistic psychology ; Further modifications of Hedonism ; Qualitative distinction of pleasures is, in both its forms, untenable ; Further criticism on Mill's view ; Results ; Note on Mr. Sidgwick's view of hedonism and utilitarianism ; Note to Essay III".
- catalog description "IV. Duty for duty's sake : The end is the good will ; This is the universal form ; What 'ought' means ; Principle of non-contradiction ; This contradicts itself ; Duty and duties ; Psychological objection ; Practical uselessness of non-contradiction ; Collision of duties unavoidable".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references.".
- catalog description "V. My station and its duties : Present result ; Advance to a higher point of view ; Individualism criticized ; The end is realization as member of a community ; The moral organism seems to be the solution of ethical problems ; Satisfactoriness of this view ; Relative and absolute morality ; Intuitive character of moral judgments ; Morality not a mere private matter ; Criticism of the above view ; Note. rights and duties".
- catalog description "VI. Ideal morality : No limit to the moral sphere ; Content of the ideal self ; Collisions of moral elements ; Morality not simply equal to self-realization ; What it is ; Difficulties as to its nature ; In what sense is it approximative?".
- catalog description "VII. Selfishness and self-sacrifice : Statement and refutation of the argument for general selfishness, which is founded on the confusion as to 'motive' ; What is the idea of a pleasure? ; Psychological genesis of the voluptuary ; What selfishness is ; General problem of the good and bad self ; Hereditary theory insufficient ; Content of good and bad selves ; Genesis of the good self ; Genesis of the bad self ; Origin of morality proper ; Nature of the morally good and bad selves ; What self-sacrifice is.".
- catalog extent "xii, 344 p.".
- catalog isPartOf "Oxford paperbacks ; 39".
- catalog issued "1962".
- catalog issued "1962, c1927.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "London ; New York : Oxford University Press,".
- catalog subject "170 18".
- catalog subject "BJ1008 .B8 1962".
- catalog subject "Ethics.".
- catalog tableOfContents "I. The vulgar notion of responsibility in connexion [connection] with the theories of free-will and necessity : Object of the inquiry ; The common notion of responsibility, irreconcilable with 'freedom'; and with rational prediction ; Ground of the objection to rational prediction ; Common opinion and necessitarianism, irreconcilable as to punishment and responsibility ; Reason of this twofold ; Note A. compulsion and responsibility ; Note B. character, how far fixed ; Note C. freedom".
- catalog tableOfContents "II. Why should I be moral? : Question rests on a dogmatic preconception, which is opposed to the moral consciousness, and is unreasonable ; The end is self-realization, as is shown from morality, and from psychological considerations ; It means realizing self as a whole, and an infinite whole ; Note to Essay II".
- catalog tableOfContents "III. Pleasure for pleasure's sake : Happiness a vague phrase ; Common opinion on pleasure ; Hedonism irreconcilable with morality ; Illusory nature of the Hedonistic end ; My pleasure as the end gives no rule of life ; And the pleasure of all is illusory; opposed to morality, and gives no practical guidance, it is dogmatically postulated, and irreconcilable with Hedonistic psychology ; Further modifications of Hedonism ; Qualitative distinction of pleasures is, in both its forms, untenable ; Further criticism on Mill's view ; Results ; Note on Mr. Sidgwick's view of hedonism and utilitarianism ; Note to Essay III".
- catalog tableOfContents "IV. Duty for duty's sake : The end is the good will ; This is the universal form ; What 'ought' means ; Principle of non-contradiction ; This contradicts itself ; Duty and duties ; Psychological objection ; Practical uselessness of non-contradiction ; Collision of duties unavoidable".
- catalog tableOfContents "V. My station and its duties : Present result ; Advance to a higher point of view ; Individualism criticized ; The end is realization as member of a community ; The moral organism seems to be the solution of ethical problems ; Satisfactoriness of this view ; Relative and absolute morality ; Intuitive character of moral judgments ; Morality not a mere private matter ; Criticism of the above view ; Note. rights and duties".
- catalog tableOfContents "VI. Ideal morality : No limit to the moral sphere ; Content of the ideal self ; Collisions of moral elements ; Morality not simply equal to self-realization ; What it is ; Difficulties as to its nature ; In what sense is it approximative?".
- catalog tableOfContents "VII. Selfishness and self-sacrifice : Statement and refutation of the argument for general selfishness, which is founded on the confusion as to 'motive' ; What is the idea of a pleasure? ; Psychological genesis of the voluptuary ; What selfishness is ; General problem of the good and bad self ; Hereditary theory insufficient ; Content of good and bad selves ; Genesis of the good self ; Genesis of the bad self ; Origin of morality proper ; Nature of the morally good and bad selves ; What self-sacrifice is.".
- catalog title "Ethical studies / by F. H. Bradley ; with an introd. by Richard Wollheim.".
- catalog type "text".