The Glasgow Edition of the Works and Correspondence of Adam Smith: I: The Theory of Moral SentimentsOUP Oxford, 1976 M09 2 - 412 páginas A scholarly edition of a work by Adam Smith. The edition presents an authoritative text, together with an introduction, commentary notes, and scholarly apparatus. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 68
Página 15
... impartiality , even though Hutcheson and Hume did not use the adjective ' impartial'11 in this connection . The originality of Adam Smith's impartial spectator lies in his development of the idea so as to explain the source and nature ...
... impartiality , even though Hutcheson and Hume did not use the adjective ' impartial'11 in this connection . The originality of Adam Smith's impartial spectator lies in his development of the idea so as to explain the source and nature ...
Página 16
... impartial spectator is not the actual ' man without ' but an imagined ' man within ' . When I judge my own conduct I do not simply observe what an actual spectator has to say ; I imagine what I should feel if I myself were a spectator ...
... impartial spectator is not the actual ' man without ' but an imagined ' man within ' . When I judge my own conduct I do not simply observe what an actual spectator has to say ; I imagine what I should feel if I myself were a spectator ...
Página 148
... impartial spectator . Both views present them- selves to him at the same time . His sense of honour , his regard to his own dignity , directs him to fix his whole attention upon the one view . His natural , his untaught and ...
... impartial spectator . Both views present them- selves to him at the same time . His sense of honour , his regard to his own dignity , directs him to fix his whole attention upon the one view . His natural , his untaught and ...
Contenido
Evolution | 15 |
The Theory of Moral Sentiments I | 3 |
Of the PROPRIETY of ACTION | 9 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 33 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
according action Adam Smith admiration affections agreeable altogether amanuensis appear applause approbation Aristotle attention beauty behaviour beneficence benevolence blamable breast called casuistry casuists CHAP character Cicero concerning conduct consider consists contempt contrary corr death degree deserve desire Diogenes Laertius disagreeable distributive justice draft dreadful Dugald Stewart duty edition endeavour Epictetus Epicurus esteem excite feel fortune friends gratitude happiness honour human nature Hume imagination impartial spectator injustice interest judge judgment justice magnanimity mankind manner manuscript ment merit mind misfortunes Moral Philosophy moral sentiments motives never observed occasions ourselves pain paragraph particular passions perfect perhaps person philosophy Plato pleasure Plutarch praise praise-worthy principle proper object propriety prudence punishment reason regard render resentment respect rules seems seldom self-command sense sensible situation society sorrow Stoicism Stoics suffer superior sympathy thing thought tion tranquillity University of Glasgow virtue virtuous weakness
Referencias a este libro
Trust: The Social Virtues and the Creation of Prosperity Francis Fukuyama Sin vista previa disponible - 1996 |