The Case for Humanism: An IntroductionRowman & Littlefield, 2003 - 223 oldal "The Case for Humanism is the premier textbook on the 'big ideas' of Western humanism--secularism, rationalism, materialism, democracy, individualism, and many others. Students are invited to think critically about these powerful themes that run through Western thought from the ancient Greeks, to the Enlightenment, to the present day. The issues discussed raise some of the most provocative and relevant questions of our time, regardless of discipline--these are the major questions of science, religion, and philosophy. Drawing on an accessible, student-friendly format, the authors teach by example how to analyze arguments for and against humanist ideas, how to judge alternative theories, and how to evaluate humanism as a whole. The text breaks humanism down into 17 fundamental propositions for students to dissect. These elements make The Case for Humanism a natural for courses in introductory and comparative religion." -- Amazon.com |
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89. oldal
... theory is that of Immanuel Kant ( 1724-1804 ) , who asserted that people have certain absolute moral duties derived not from empirical facts but from logical ... moral principles or judgments are in conflict . Any The Moral Life 89.
... theory is that of Immanuel Kant ( 1724-1804 ) , who asserted that people have certain absolute moral duties derived not from empirical facts but from logical ... moral principles or judgments are in conflict . Any The Moral Life 89.
90. oldal
... moral theories must . . . • Be consistent with our considered moral judgments . • Be consistent with our experience of the moral life . • Be workable . In science there is a kind of tension between theory and data . The data affect the ...
... moral theories must . . . • Be consistent with our considered moral judgments . • Be consistent with our experience of the moral life . • Be workable . In science there is a kind of tension between theory and data . The data affect the ...
111. oldal
... moral theory and is it plausible ? 3. What are consequentialist moral theories ? What are formalist moral theories ? 4. What is the divine command theory ? Is it a plausible theory ? 5. What is emotivism ? What is moral relativism ? The ...
... moral theory and is it plausible ? 3. What are consequentialist moral theories ? What are formalist moral theories ? 4. What is the divine command theory ? Is it a plausible theory ? 5. What is emotivism ? What is moral relativism ? The ...
Tartalomjegyzék
Foreword by Evan Fales | 1 |
Human Nature | 31 |
Freedom and Destiny | 67 |
Copyright | |
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Alvin Plantinga anthropocentrism argue argument belief body called Cambridge causal determinism cause century Christian claim commonsense compatibilism Compatibilists concept conceptual scheme conflict cosmological arguments criteria critical David Hume Descartes divine command theory doctrine dualism duties Enlightenment epistemology ethics evidence evil evolution evolutionary example existence explain fact faith false free actions freedom God's Greek happiness humanist ideas Immanuel Kant individual John Locke justified Kant kind liberal lives logical means mind moral judgments moral theory naturalistic notion objective ontological argument Oxford person philosophers physical Plantinga plausible political possible premise principle problem properly basic properties proposition question rational reality reason reject relativism religion religious René Descartes scientific scientists secular seems sense Situation Ethics skepticism social society someone soul statements substance dualism supernatural supposed theism theologians theology things thinkers thought tion traditional true truth uncaused understanding University Press worldview wrong York