Mind, Volume 77Oxford University Press, 1968 A journal of philosophy covering epistemology, metaphysics, philosophy of language, philosophy of logic, and philosophy of mind. |
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Página 223
... principle appear ? Lucas considers and rejects the possibility that the egalitarian's principle is premiss ( i ) . This alone cannot be what egalitarians have fought for , because " by itself ( it ) establishes very little " ( p . 297 ) ...
... principle appear ? Lucas considers and rejects the possibility that the egalitarian's principle is premiss ( i ) . This alone cannot be what egalitarians have fought for , because " by itself ( it ) establishes very little " ( p . 297 ) ...
Página 224
... principle of universal humanity . This is of too limited scope to function happily as an egalitarian ideal . ( d ) The principle , " treat everyone alike " . This , according to Lucas , is the true egalitarian principle . I shall now ...
... principle of universal humanity . This is of too limited scope to function happily as an egalitarian ideal . ( d ) The principle , " treat everyone alike " . This , according to Lucas , is the true egalitarian principle . I shall now ...
Página 572
... principle which allows the inference from ( 2 ) and ( 3 ) to ( 5 ) . That is , they reject the principle ( P ) which says that if someone can do something which is sufficient for A , then it follows that he can do A. Now if ( 1 ) - ( 4 ) ...
... principle which allows the inference from ( 2 ) and ( 3 ) to ( 5 ) . That is , they reject the principle ( P ) which says that if someone can do something which is sufficient for A , then it follows that he can do A. Now if ( 1 ) - ( 4 ) ...
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accept affected analytic answer argue argument Aristotle Aristotle's assertion baked a cake behaviour believe belongs called claim concept conclusion conditional statement context cosmological argument criteria criterion definition discussion distinction entails example existence explain expression fact false figure syllogism finite finitist follows Form of Bed formal logic G. E. Moore given H. L. A. Hart inference intention interpretation Kelsen language legal duty Lucretius mathematical mathematical logic means mental images mind moral nature necessary norm notion object paradox particular person philosophical Plato position possible predicate premisses principle Prior Analytics problem proof proper name proposition question R. M. Hare reason reference regard relation relevant remember rule Russell's paradox Saladin sanction seems sense sentence simply singular someone sort Strawson suppose syllogistic syllogistic pair theory thesis thing Timaeus tion true truth unfulfilled conditional statement value judgment visualising words