| Daniel I. O'Neill - 2010 - 306 páginas
...uniform affective responses were woven into the fabric of a universal human nature. For this reason, "whatever is the passion which arises from any object...an analogous emotion springs up, at the thought of his situation, in the breast of every attentive spectator." As opposed to Hume, then, for Smith utilitarian... | |
| Helga Schwalm - 2007 - 422 páginas
...also als eine Art Rollenübernahme, die analoge Empfindungen im verstehenden Subjekt entstehen lässt: "Whatever is the passion which arises from any object...an analogous emotion springs up, at the thought of his Situation, in the breast of every attentive spectator."54 Damit bringt Smith gleich eingangs sein... | |
| Joy Connolly - 2009 - 321 páginas
...places in fancy with the sufferer, we come either to conceive or to be affected by what he feels. . . . Neither is it those circumstances only, which create...pain or sorrow, that call forth our fellow-feeling" (ll).33 CATULLUS'S REPUBLICAN RHETORIC A number of scholars have considered Catullus in his historical... | |
| Angela A. Stanton - 2008 - 63 páginas
...sympathy (as "fellow-feeling"), passions and how preferences are born in the Theory of Moral Sentiments: Neither is it those circumstances only, which create...an analogous emotion springs up, at the thought of his situation, in the breast of every attentive spectator (page 5, Adam Smith 1892) The above passage... | |
| 1841 - 430 páginas
...that organ being in the strongest man more delicate than any other part of the body is in the weakest. Neither is it those circumstances only which create...fellow-feeling. Whatever is the passion which arises fromany object in the person principally concerned, an analogousemotion springs up at the thought of... | |
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