Compass, Wis, Pow 1.4 - OPUS at UTS
... within the Dzong (state-religious fortress-monasteries). Analysis reveals the importance of recognizing the limits of compassion and cultivating it in conjunction with virtues of wisdom and power. The implications of this analysis for further academic research and the challenges of realizing it in o ...
... within the Dzong (state-religious fortress-monasteries). Analysis reveals the importance of recognizing the limits of compassion and cultivating it in conjunction with virtues of wisdom and power. The implications of this analysis for further academic research and the challenges of realizing it in o ...
searchable pdf - The Hume Society
... metaphysics of ethics. In this respect, Hume differs sharply from the traditional neoAristotelian naturalism of modern virtue ethics. For Hume, ethics is responsedependent, and the relevant responses are certain emotions. To say that ethics is response-dependent in this way is to say, broadly speaki ...
... metaphysics of ethics. In this respect, Hume differs sharply from the traditional neoAristotelian naturalism of modern virtue ethics. For Hume, ethics is responsedependent, and the relevant responses are certain emotions. To say that ethics is response-dependent in this way is to say, broadly speaki ...
Do the Compassionate Flourish?: Overcoming Anguish and the Impulse towards Violence
... and the pictures I saw, filled me with a number of strong emotions. First, compassion for the prisoners, then anger at the soldiers who had perpetrated this abuse, then rage at the U.S. military-industrial-prison complex. By virtue of being a U.S. citizen, I felt implicated in what our soldiers had ...
... and the pictures I saw, filled me with a number of strong emotions. First, compassion for the prisoners, then anger at the soldiers who had perpetrated this abuse, then rage at the U.S. military-industrial-prison complex. By virtue of being a U.S. citizen, I felt implicated in what our soldiers had ...
How Moral Identity Influences Leadership Ethics: A Historical Case
... emerge from the variance of individual social and cognitive viewpoints. In turn, leaders who demonstrated a complex and multifaceted self-construct that included values also performed better in the leadership role and served as positive role models (Hannah, Lord, & Woolfolk, 2009). Conversely, leade ...
... emerge from the variance of individual social and cognitive viewpoints. In turn, leaders who demonstrated a complex and multifaceted self-construct that included values also performed better in the leadership role and served as positive role models (Hannah, Lord, & Woolfolk, 2009). Conversely, leade ...
Beyond Evaluation Standards?
... (EES) (10-12 October 2002 in Seville, Spain) had a roundtable entitled, ‘Do we need European evaluation standards?’ and this roundtable attracted over 50 evaluators and commissioners of evaluations. Moreover, the theme of evaluation standards will also appear on the agenda of the next EES conference ...
... (EES) (10-12 October 2002 in Seville, Spain) had a roundtable entitled, ‘Do we need European evaluation standards?’ and this roundtable attracted over 50 evaluators and commissioners of evaluations. Moreover, the theme of evaluation standards will also appear on the agenda of the next EES conference ...
Virtue Ethics - Which Character Traits are Good?
... bad for person b/c never satisfied with what she has bad for others (confrontational, person will tend to grab more than fair-share whenever possible) is everyone greedy? ...
... bad for person b/c never satisfied with what she has bad for others (confrontational, person will tend to grab more than fair-share whenever possible) is everyone greedy? ...
GIVING UP YOUR PLACE IN HISTORY. AND JEWISH THOUGHT
... For an analysis of the relation between the phenomenological, reductional reading of history found in Husserl and Heidegger with that of Levinas, see Taminiaux 1998:4976. ...
... For an analysis of the relation between the phenomenological, reductional reading of history found in Husserl and Heidegger with that of Levinas, see Taminiaux 1998:4976. ...
ProfessionalEthics
... Preamble – States that there is no mechanical process – Even two people using the same philosophy can reach different conclusions – The code is a guide, not the law ...
... Preamble – States that there is no mechanical process – Even two people using the same philosophy can reach different conclusions – The code is a guide, not the law ...
Full Text - Digital Access to Scholarship at Harvard
... If, then, those who lived in old ways came to newness of hope, no longer keeping Sabbath, but living in accordance with the Lord’s day, on which also our life arose through him and his death (which some deny), through which mystery we received faith, and therefore we endure that we may be found disc ...
... If, then, those who lived in old ways came to newness of hope, no longer keeping Sabbath, but living in accordance with the Lord’s day, on which also our life arose through him and his death (which some deny), through which mystery we received faith, and therefore we endure that we may be found disc ...
A STUDY OF THE APOSTLE PAUL‟S APPROACH TO THE LAW IN
... created by historical exegesis or Jewish acuities fuelled by this interpretation made visible by the attitudes of some Christian groups. Hans Hübner in comparing Paul‟s attitude to the Law in Galatians and Romans states: Anyone reading Galatians up to and including 5:12...would be unlikely on his o ...
... created by historical exegesis or Jewish acuities fuelled by this interpretation made visible by the attitudes of some Christian groups. Hans Hübner in comparing Paul‟s attitude to the Law in Galatians and Romans states: Anyone reading Galatians up to and including 5:12...would be unlikely on his o ...
MacIntyre`s Search for a Defensible Aristotelian Ethics and the Role
... So the main question here is not what can be considered an adequate formulation of the most fundamental ethical thought of Aristotle,2 but rather the question how MacIntyre conceived the answer to this question. I believe that this task would require (among other things) showing how and why MacIntyr ...
... So the main question here is not what can be considered an adequate formulation of the most fundamental ethical thought of Aristotle,2 but rather the question how MacIntyre conceived the answer to this question. I believe that this task would require (among other things) showing how and why MacIntyr ...
Running head: Aristotelian method
... Aristotelian method – resubmission: MHEP 296 Stage three: explaining the phenomena and resolving the puzzles. The third stage of Aristotle‟s method is the most controversial. I shall begin with points that are generally agreed. The first is that the goal of the third stage is resolution of the puzz ...
... Aristotelian method – resubmission: MHEP 296 Stage three: explaining the phenomena and resolving the puzzles. The third stage of Aristotle‟s method is the most controversial. I shall begin with points that are generally agreed. The first is that the goal of the third stage is resolution of the puzz ...
Judaism— Revelation of Moses Or Religion of Men?
... has caused considerable confusion—especially when studying the apostle Paul’s complex writings concerning law-keeping and grace. In certain key passages dealing with “law” and “works of law,” it is widely assumed that Paul’s intention is to condemn or abolish the laws and commandments of God. Rather ...
... has caused considerable confusion—especially when studying the apostle Paul’s complex writings concerning law-keeping and grace. In certain key passages dealing with “law” and “works of law,” it is widely assumed that Paul’s intention is to condemn or abolish the laws and commandments of God. Rather ...
teleology, utilitarianism, and christian ethics
... to understand the elements of moral reasoning is not to divide them between two mutually exclusive models, but rather to take each model as a general and comprehensive perspective on moral agency within which all the key factors in moral obligation may be included in interrelations peculiar to that ...
... to understand the elements of moral reasoning is not to divide them between two mutually exclusive models, but rather to take each model as a general and comprehensive perspective on moral agency within which all the key factors in moral obligation may be included in interrelations peculiar to that ...
Vowing Away the Fifth Commandment
... The first discovery is a fragment of a stone vessel recovered from an excavation of a first-century-BCE Herodian street near the Temple in Jerusalem.18 The vessel, found among coins and other vessels, bears the inscription Nbrq, most likely representing the Hebrew noun NBAr;qA. Along with this inscr ...
... The first discovery is a fragment of a stone vessel recovered from an excavation of a first-century-BCE Herodian street near the Temple in Jerusalem.18 The vessel, found among coins and other vessels, bears the inscription Nbrq, most likely representing the Hebrew noun NBAr;qA. Along with this inscr ...
theology, religion and ethics
... on the early history of Buddhism in the Indian subcontinent, and its spread to parts of Asia to the north, south, and east of India. The second part of the module will engage with the transformations brought about as a result of Buddhism’s encounter with modernity. Exploring particular case studies, ...
... on the early history of Buddhism in the Indian subcontinent, and its spread to parts of Asia to the north, south, and east of India. The second part of the module will engage with the transformations brought about as a result of Buddhism’s encounter with modernity. Exploring particular case studies, ...
The inescapability of ethics and the impossibility of
... grounds that it asserts that reality either (a) is itself nothing more than a construction, or (b) can only be accessed indirectly through actively invented constructions. She sees both grounds as antirealist. The first ground («reality is just a construction») is antirealist because seeing reality ...
... grounds that it asserts that reality either (a) is itself nothing more than a construction, or (b) can only be accessed indirectly through actively invented constructions. She sees both grounds as antirealist. The first ground («reality is just a construction») is antirealist because seeing reality ...
Restoration Quarterly 42 (2000) 193
... The first discovery is a fragment of a stone vessel recovered from an excavation of a first-century-BCE Herodian street near the Temple in Jerusalem.18 The vessel, found among coins and other vessels, bears the inscription Nbrq most likely representing the Hebrew noun NBAr;qA. Along with this inscri ...
... The first discovery is a fragment of a stone vessel recovered from an excavation of a first-century-BCE Herodian street near the Temple in Jerusalem.18 The vessel, found among coins and other vessels, bears the inscription Nbrq most likely representing the Hebrew noun NBAr;qA. Along with this inscri ...
One of the characteristic features of Gadamer`s hermeneutics is the
... reveal and analyze ‘moral truths.’ From Gadamer’s perspective, not only do these theories neglect the essentially practical nature of the ethical, but underlying them is a flawed conception of the ethical agent and its relation to the world: that of an essentially disengaged and atomistic subject. ...
... reveal and analyze ‘moral truths.’ From Gadamer’s perspective, not only do these theories neglect the essentially practical nature of the ethical, but underlying them is a flawed conception of the ethical agent and its relation to the world: that of an essentially disengaged and atomistic subject. ...
The Stoic Cosmos as a Mirror.
... viewpoint was often employed by Stoic philosophers to account for “the apparent counterintuitive thesis that pain and death are not evils” (Boeri 2009). Seneca, Lucan’s uncle, writes as much in his Consolatio ad Marciam. There, Seneca comforts a friend by relating to him the end of the world-- when ...
... viewpoint was often employed by Stoic philosophers to account for “the apparent counterintuitive thesis that pain and death are not evils” (Boeri 2009). Seneca, Lucan’s uncle, writes as much in his Consolatio ad Marciam. There, Seneca comforts a friend by relating to him the end of the world-- when ...
Can Virtue Ethics Account for Supererogation?
... informal and open-ended nature calling for interpretation and discretion, there is an inbuilt limit to the scope of duty. There may be a normative disagreement about the dividing line between what is required of us and what is purely optional, but there is no doubt that Dr. Rieux in Albert Camus’ Th ...
... informal and open-ended nature calling for interpretation and discretion, there is an inbuilt limit to the scope of duty. There may be a normative disagreement about the dividing line between what is required of us and what is purely optional, but there is no doubt that Dr. Rieux in Albert Camus’ Th ...
Print this article - Women in Judaism: A Multidisciplinary Journal
... potential social absorption; Jewish identity is under threat and survival is not guaranteed. Reflecting her acculturation, the name Esther is taken from a Babylonian goddess, even though she was born Hadassah. Indeed, “this is the virtuous Esther who is called Hadassah” (Megilah 10b),7 “Why then was ...
... potential social absorption; Jewish identity is under threat and survival is not guaranteed. Reflecting her acculturation, the name Esther is taken from a Babylonian goddess, even though she was born Hadassah. Indeed, “this is the virtuous Esther who is called Hadassah” (Megilah 10b),7 “Why then was ...
Ethical Naturalism
... Topic 4. Ethical naturalism in Hellenistic philosophy: the interpretation of the criterion of acting according to Nature in Cynicism, Cyreneaicism, Epicureanism, and Stoicism. The development of the concept of natural law in Stoicism. PART II: Ethical Naturalism in medieval and modern philosophy To ...
... Topic 4. Ethical naturalism in Hellenistic philosophy: the interpretation of the criterion of acting according to Nature in Cynicism, Cyreneaicism, Epicureanism, and Stoicism. The development of the concept of natural law in Stoicism. PART II: Ethical Naturalism in medieval and modern philosophy To ...
The Day of Judaism in the Catholic Church of Poland
... religions. In addition, the reorientation of the Council, often taken for granted or unrealized by today’s generation, set out the reconciliation of the Church with Judaism. It is no exaggeration to say that in the long term this reorientation brought forth the Day of Judaism in Poland. From this pe ...
... religions. In addition, the reorientation of the Council, often taken for granted or unrealized by today’s generation, set out the reconciliation of the Church with Judaism. It is no exaggeration to say that in the long term this reorientation brought forth the Day of Judaism in Poland. From this pe ...
Yom Kippur Notes - Summer 08 - for PDF
... Only the living can eat and take part in bodily enjoyment. Only the living can build, destroy and transform. The kittle that we wear today is also the same garment in which Jews are buried. As we engage in these rituals, we symbolically act out a moment of death—not bodily death, but a symbolic deat ...
... Only the living can eat and take part in bodily enjoyment. Only the living can build, destroy and transform. The kittle that we wear today is also the same garment in which Jews are buried. As we engage in these rituals, we symbolically act out a moment of death—not bodily death, but a symbolic deat ...