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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... forces are, however, often divergent, sometimes radically so. We must seek a completer insight. There must be some best way of solving the problem of life, some happiest, most useful way of living; its pursuit constitutes the field of ...
... force of incalculable power, which is largely unused. Politics and business, and to a far greater extent than now private life, will become clean and honest and kind just so soon as a sufficient number of people wake up and demand it ...
... forces it has tended to develop. With these data in mind, we shall be the better able, in the Second Part, to formulate our criteria for judging the different codes of morality; we shall find that we are but making explicit and ...
... force in human affairs. The desire for the approval of others, which is prehuman, makes for all the virtues. (2) But in ... forces would not have come into play at all. There is a small class of people who are dominated throughout their ...
... forces which we have enumerated. How far has the moralizing process been blind and how far conscious? (1) To a very large extent the moralizing process has been a merely mechanical one. Through slight differences in nervestructure ...
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