| Sir Lewis Amherst Selby-Bigge - 1897 - 456 sayfa
...propriety bcyins. ******** Of Human Nature [First printed, 1650.] CHAPTER IX. *»•*«•». OO7 10. PITY is imagination or fiction of future calamity...proceeding from the sense of another man's calamity. ISut when it lighteth on such as we think have not deserved the same, the compassion is greater, because... | |
| Sir Lewis Amherst Selby-Bigge - 1897 - 476 sayfa
...or fiction of future calamity to ourselves, proceeding from the sense of another man's calamity. Rut when it lighteth on such as we think have not deserved the same, the compassion is greater, because then there appeareth more probability that the same may happen to us: for, the evil that happencth... | |
| Thomas Hobbes - 1898 - 408 sayfa
...in the phrase of this present time a FELLOW-FEELING." ' This is stated still more broadly elsewhere: "Pity is imagination or fiction of future calamity...deserved the same, the compassion is greater, because then there appeareth more probability that the same may happen to us : for, the evil that happeneth... | |
| James Hayden Tufts - 1898 - 122 sayfa
...fellows as for love of ourselves."5 And pity, which, if any, ought to be a social motion, is defined as "imagination or fiction of future calamity to ourselves proceeding from the sense of another man's calamity."6 There 1 English Works, IV, 48. *Ibid., II, xvii. 'Ibid., Ill, 139. s Kid., II, 3, 5. *Ibid.,... | |
| William Archibald Spooner - 1901 - 334 sayfa
...pity be explained away as a form of self-love, or, as Hobbes would have it, nothing more than the " imagination or fiction of future calamity to ourselves, proceeding from the sense (he means sight or knowledge) of another man's calamity." l Were Hobbes's contention true, it would... | |
| James Mark Baldwin - 1902 - 946 sayfa
...his principle of the absolute selfishness of human nature to the case of pity, which he defined as ' imagination or fiction of future calamity to ourselves,...proceeding from the sense of another man's calamity ' (Unman Nature, chap. ix). Hutcheson maintained, as against this view, that pity is a disinterested... | |
| Paul Janet, Gabriel Séailles - 1902 - 434 sayfa
...pursue that way no longer, but, by consideration of the end, to direct themselves unto a better. . . . Pity is imagination or fiction of future calamity to ourselves, proceeding from the sense of another's calamity. . . . There is yet another passion, sometimes called love, but, more properly,... | |
| Leslie Stephen, Frederic William Maitland - 1904 - 264 sayfa
...obvious truths which require no proof or explanation. "Pity," he observes with superlative calmness, is imagination or fiction of future calamity to ourselves,...proceeding from the sense of another man's calamity. We pity those who suffer an undeserved calamity, " because then there appeareth more probability that... | |
| James Hastings, John Alexander Selbie, Louis Herbert Gray - 1919 - 932 sayfa
...stated Hobbes's definition of pity as given in his treatise on Human Nature, ch. ix. § 10, as ' the imagination or fiction of future calamity to ourselves, proceeding from the sense (he means sight or knowledge) of another man's calamity,' he proceeds to criticize it in the following... | |
| Konrad von Orelli - 1912 - 234 sayfa
...„Ich" handelt, 1) Am konsequentesten ist hierin Hob b es, dessen Definition des Mitleids lautet: Pity is Imagination or fiction of future calamity to ourselves, proceeding from the sense of another mans calamity, vgl. p. 69 f. Ähnlich die französischen „Egoisten" : Larochef oucauld, Helvetius... | |
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