What is it then that I am to realize? We have said it in "my station and its duties." To know what a man is (as we have seen) you must not take him in isolation. He is one of a people, he was born in a family, he lives in a certain society, in a certain... Ethical Studies - Sayfa 139Francis Herbert Bradley tarafından - 1876 - 344 sayfaTam görünüm - Bu kitap hakkında
| 1928 - 364 sayfa
...The thesis of this essay, which is also the guiding idea of the book, is that " to know what a man is you must not take him in isolation. He is one of a...and that all comes from his station in the organism. ... In short, man is a social being ; he is real only because he is social, and can realize himself... | |
| 1928 - 674 sayfa
...The thesis of this essay, which is also the guiding idea of the book, is that " to know what a man is you must not take him in isolation. He is one of a...and that all comes from his station in the organism. ... In short, man is a social being ; he is real only because he is social, and can realize himself... | |
| John Herman Randall Jr. - 1977 - 372 sayfa
...it then that I am to realize? We have said it in "my station and its duties." To know what a man is you must not take him in isolation. He is one of a...and that all comes from his station in the organism. (173) Bradley defends his Hegelian — and Aristotelian — view against that of Kant. That made the... | |
| Peter P. Nicholson, Nicholson Peter P - 1990 - 384 sayfa
...universal life. What is it then that I am to realize? We have said it in "my station and its duties".2 To know what a man is (as we have seen) you must not...and that all comes from his station in the organism. . . . Leaving out of sight the question of a society wider than the state, we must say that a man's... | |
| Roy Weatherford - 1993 - 188 sayfa
...Chandler, 1960, p. 192.) 9 Bradley says my duty is 'mine and no other man's' (op. cit., p. 162), and 'to know what a man is (as we have seen) you must...and that all comes from his station in the organism' (FH Bradley, op. cit, p. 173). 10 I. Kant, Foundations of the Metaphysics of Morals, translated and... | |
| Roy Weatherford - 1993 - 188 sayfa
...Chandler, 1960, p. 192.) 9 Bradley says my duty is 'mine and no other man's' (op. cit., p. 162), and 'to know what a man is (as we have seen) you must...and that all comes from his station in the organism' (FH Bradley, op. cit, p. 173). 10 I. Kant, Foundations of the Metaphysics of Morals, translated and... | |
| Roy Weatherford - 1993 - 196 sayfa
...what a man is (as we have seen) you must not take him in isolation. He is one of a people, he was bom in a family, he lives in a certain society, in a certain...and that all comes from his station in the organism' (FH Bradley, op. cit., p. 173). 10 I. Kant, Foundations of the Metaphysics of Morals, translated and... | |
| Jennifer Welchman - 1997 - 244 sayfa
...of personality, is given by one's choice and performance of particular roles. Or as Bradley put it, "what he has to do depends on what his place is, what...function is, and that all comes from his station in the [social] organism" (173). On this understanding of the nature of persons and their relations to one... | |
| David Boucher, Paul Joseph Kelly - 1998 - 312 sayfa
...and establish what is distinctive about ourselves. 37 Bradley argues that what a person realises, or 'has to do depends on what his place is, what his...that all comes from his station in the organism'. 38 This is not, in Bosanquet's view, merely one's occupation but includes the family, neighbours and... | |
| Rudolph Herbert Weingartner - 1999 - 212 sayfa
...from his or her community — that is, the administrator's institution — is merely an abstraction. "What he has to do depends on what his place is, what...that all comes from his station in the organism," that is, from the role in that institution. "What is it then that [he or she] is to realize? We have... | |
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