Mind, Volume 84Oxford University Press, 1975 Issues for 1896-1900 contain papers of the Aristotelian Society. |
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Página 417
person . His autonomy is his most precious possession , and gives him his property right in and to himself . His autonomy as a chooser means that , ceteris paribus , other persons do not have rights over him and his person ; it is his ...
person . His autonomy is his most precious possession , and gives him his property right in and to himself . His autonomy as a chooser means that , ceteris paribus , other persons do not have rights over him and his person ; it is his ...
Página 509
... person displaying it , as well as the collective to which he belongs ; behaviour that , as it were , leaps the bounds of human reason , whether good reason or bad . By itself , then , no amount of physiological knowledge will tell us in ...
... person displaying it , as well as the collective to which he belongs ; behaviour that , as it were , leaps the bounds of human reason , whether good reason or bad . By itself , then , no amount of physiological knowledge will tell us in ...
Página 511
... person open to blame , as distinct from another person that we would excuse , common feeling is that we cannot get a hold of what exactly it is about the former person that makes the blame ' stick ' . ( ' After all ' , we feel like ...
... person open to blame , as distinct from another person that we would excuse , common feeling is that we cannot get a hold of what exactly it is about the former person that makes the blame ' stick ' . ( ' After all ' , we feel like ...
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accept action analysis analytic analytic propositions argued argument Aristotle assert Avenue basic behaviour believe Canada causal claim class abstracts College colour concept conclusion criteria criticism death decision definition Department of Philosophy discussion distinction doctrine Edited entails entities epistemology essay example existence explained expression fact false feeling Frege Geach Heidegger human individual induction inference intuition involved Jonathan Bennett kind knowledge language language-game logical London matter means mind moral nature necessary notion numerical identity object ostensive definition Oxford P. F. Strawson pain paradox particular person Philosophy Department Philosophy of Science physical position possible precise predicate principle problem Prof proper names properties proposition question rational reference relation relevant Road RTCP rules rules of inference seems semantic sense sentence simply Socrates spatial statement suggest suppose temporal theory thesis things tion true truth veil of perception Wittgenstein York