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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... matter for dispute and no moral judgments are reliable, seems to me unfortunate; I have preferred to incur the charge of dogmatism rather than to fall into that error to offer a clear cut set of standards, to which exception will be ...
... matters, is the field of moral philosophy, or ethics. The one group of studies deals with facts simply as facts, the other with their values. Human life is checkered with the sunshine and shadow of good and evil, joy and pain; it is ...
... ; or to think the matter through, to get some definite criteria for judgments, and to face the recurrent question, what shall we do? In the steady light of those principles. (Cf. Matthew Arnold, Essays in Criticism, vol. i:
... matter of breeding and convention, or of impulse and emotion, but the result of rational insight and conscious resolve. To many people morality seems nothing but convention, or an arbitrary tyranny, or a mysterious and awful necessity ...
... matter. So if we are to form an unbiased conception of what morality is, it will be safest to consider first what the morals of men actually have been, how they came into being, and what function they have served in human life. Thus we ...
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