Problems of Conduct: An Introductory Survey of Ethics: Navigating Ethics: Exploring the Seas of Conduct with Durant DrakePrabhat Prakashan, 1920 M01 1 - 398 páginas Problems of Conduct: An Introductory Survey of Ethics by Durant Drake: In "Problems of Conduct," Durant Drake provides an introductory exploration of ethical dilemmas and moral philosophy. The book navigates through various ethical theories, addressing complex questions about right and wrong, personal responsibility, and decision-making in challenging situations. Key Aspects of the Book "Problems of Conduct: An Introductory Survey of Ethics": Durant Drake was an American philosopher and educator known for his contributions to ethics and moral philosophy. His work, "Problems of Conduct," serves as an accessible entry point into the realm of ethical thinking, encouraging readers to reflect on their values and make informed ethical choices. |
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... consciously choose and steer our course are few and fleeting. Yet with the development of civilization the elemental burdens are to some extent lifted; men come to have superfluous strength, leisure hours, freedom to do something more ...
... conscious resolve. To many people morality seems nothing but convention, or an arbitrary tyranny, or a mysterious and awful necessity, something extraneous to their own desires, from which they would like to escape. To be able to refute ...
... conscious the considerations that, unexpressed and unrealized, have been the persistent and underlying factors in their development. How early in the evolutionary process did personal morality of some sort emerge? Of course the words ...
... conscious obedience to a sense of duty or to the moral law, it would obviously be a late product. But morality in this sense is only an ultimate development of what in its less conscious and reflective forms dates far back in pre-human ...
... conscious moral idealism is but a continuation and development of the process then begun. Any theory of right and wrong must take account of the fact that morality, unlike art, science, and religion, is not an exclusively human affair ...
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