The Nature of Goodness by George Herbert Palmer
page 22 of 153 (14%)
page 22 of 153 (14%)
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Alexander's Moral Order and Progress, bk. ii. ch. ii.
Bradley's Appearance and Reality, ch. xxv. Sidgwick's Methods, bk. i. ch. ix. Spencer's Principles of Ethics, pt. i. ch. iii. Muirhead's Elements of Ethics, bk. iv. ch. ii. Ladd's Philosophy of Conduct, ch. iii. Kant's Practical Reason, bk. i. ch. ii. The Meaning of Good, by G.L. Dickinson. II MISCONCEPTIONS OF GOODNESS I Our diagram of goodness, as drawn in the last chapter, has its special imperfections, and through these cannot fail to suggest certain erroneous notions of goodness. To these I now turn. The first of them is connected with its own method of construction. It will be |
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