Samuel Johnson, the MoralistHarvard University Press, 1961 - 188 страници |
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Страница 41
... Wishes these forces seem to be due to necessity rather than accident and that even when he does refer to the concept of fortune or chance he seems to follow medieval and classical practice in emphasizing inevitability instead of ...
... Wishes these forces seem to be due to necessity rather than accident and that even when he does refer to the concept of fortune or chance he seems to follow medieval and classical practice in emphasizing inevitability instead of ...
Страница 44
... Wishes in a more than ordinarily gloomy era of his life . There is some proof that the fatalism is the product of a tran- sient mood in the fact that five years later Johnson interpreted the closing lines of Juvenal's tenth satire in a ...
... Wishes in a more than ordinarily gloomy era of his life . There is some proof that the fatalism is the product of a tran- sient mood in the fact that five years later Johnson interpreted the closing lines of Juvenal's tenth satire in a ...
Страница 45
... Wishes , as in " The Vision of Theo- dore , " Johnson is exercising the moralist's license to overstate . He certainly believes that in ordinary life to walk with circumspection and steadiness in the right path , at an equal distance ...
... Wishes , as in " The Vision of Theo- dore , " Johnson is exercising the moralist's license to overstate . He certainly believes that in ordinary life to walk with circumspection and steadiness in the right path , at an equal distance ...
Съдържание
Reason and Freedom | 23 |
The Nature of Johnsons Altruism | 47 |
Utility and Altruism | 59 |
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Achievement of Samuel action Adventurer altruistic annihilation argument attitude authority believes beneficence benevolence Boswell capital punishment century charity concept of reason concerning consider contemporaries conviction Cumberland death deism deist derived described discussion divine duty economic effect eighteenth eighteenth-century emotions epistemology Essay ethical evil faculty psychology faith fundamental Hagstrum happiness Hobbes human nature Human Wishes ideas Idler individual instance intuition involved Jenyns's John John Locke Johnson feels Johnson's fear Johnson's moral Johnson's rationalism Jonas Hanway Laws of Nature less Locke Lockean man's mankind mind moral notions moralist motive natural law never passion piety pleasure poem political practical principles Puffendorf punishment Rambler Rasselas rational faculty rationalists readers regarding religion religious remarks Richard Cumberland Samuel Clarke Samuel Johnson says seems sense sentimental Sermon Shaftesbury skepticism slavery Soame Jenyns social society sort subordination theory things thinking Thomas Hobbes thought tion truth ultimate utilitarian Vanity of Human virtue virtuous