Nietzsche`s Conception of Friendship
... Nietzsche’s friends are more similar to the relationship shared between two enemies than two persons concerned with each others’ well-being. Thus, in this dissertation I will demonstrate how Nietzsche’s conception of friendship, without traditional elements like compassion and selflessness, encourag ...
... Nietzsche’s friends are more similar to the relationship shared between two enemies than two persons concerned with each others’ well-being. Thus, in this dissertation I will demonstrate how Nietzsche’s conception of friendship, without traditional elements like compassion and selflessness, encourag ...
View - OhioLINK Electronic Theses and Dissertations Center
... moralists have every right to hold the agent accountable. Free will assumes that the strong can choose to become weak, and if they do not, then the strong may be justifiably punished. Regarding component (2), the notion of a transparent or stable ‘self’ undermines the ...
... moralists have every right to hold the agent accountable. Free will assumes that the strong can choose to become weak, and if they do not, then the strong may be justifiably punished. Regarding component (2), the notion of a transparent or stable ‘self’ undermines the ...
Rhetoric and the Incommensurability
... Lamprecht’s concern for the “rival codes and standards of right.” It is not, however, a subject much treated in the value-incommensurabilist literature (though it will no doubt escalate as religious and economic frameworks clash politically in the wake of the terrorism and warfare that has defined t ...
... Lamprecht’s concern for the “rival codes and standards of right.” It is not, however, a subject much treated in the value-incommensurabilist literature (though it will no doubt escalate as religious and economic frameworks clash politically in the wake of the terrorism and warfare that has defined t ...
lewiscatron - Michigan State University
... ownership of public affairs. The best solutions are not compromises but novel, fully adequate responses to the situation. Instead of being satisfied with doing as little harm as possible, an administrator with moral imagination seeks to satisfy as many ethical values and principles as possible; thus ...
... ownership of public affairs. The best solutions are not compromises but novel, fully adequate responses to the situation. Instead of being satisfied with doing as little harm as possible, an administrator with moral imagination seeks to satisfy as many ethical values and principles as possible; thus ...
Nietzschean Ethics: One`s Duty to Overcome
... According to Hussain, “Nietzsche claims that nothing has value in itself and therefore all claims of the form ‘X is valuable’ are false.” 20 Therefore, even a subjective claim of the form ‘X is valuable’ would contradict Hussain’s interpretation. Of course, this is a huge assumption to make based on ...
... According to Hussain, “Nietzsche claims that nothing has value in itself and therefore all claims of the form ‘X is valuable’ are false.” 20 Therefore, even a subjective claim of the form ‘X is valuable’ would contradict Hussain’s interpretation. Of course, this is a huge assumption to make based on ...
Dieter Birnbacher - Kultura i Wartości
... humanity. It is sufficient that it covers all members of a defined group to which the values is personally or ideologically related, such as a tribe, a culture, or a religious creed For Hume’s condition of “resonance” to be fulfilled it seems perfectly sufficient that this resonance extends over the ...
... humanity. It is sufficient that it covers all members of a defined group to which the values is personally or ideologically related, such as a tribe, a culture, or a religious creed For Hume’s condition of “resonance” to be fulfilled it seems perfectly sufficient that this resonance extends over the ...
Center for ETHICS - University of Idaho
... A Moral and Nonmoral Value is involved. The Agent MUST have a CHOICE, without coercion. A Moral Principle is in conflict. The Agent is faced with Moral Obligation. ...
... A Moral and Nonmoral Value is involved. The Agent MUST have a CHOICE, without coercion. A Moral Principle is in conflict. The Agent is faced with Moral Obligation. ...
Welcome to this session On ENTREPRENEURIAL ETHICS By Rev
... THE MEDIA GUIDE Would I be embarrassed in front of colleagues, family, friends, if my decision or actions were publicized in the media? ...
... THE MEDIA GUIDE Would I be embarrassed in front of colleagues, family, friends, if my decision or actions were publicized in the media? ...
IOSR Journal Of Humanities And Social Science (IOSR-JHSS)
... criteria, objects and possessions, personality and status, Characteristics and State of mind that are absolute inherent in object present in man and or identical with his behavior… .” From philosophical point of view value signifies the usefulness of a concept or ideals which an individual adopts be ...
... criteria, objects and possessions, personality and status, Characteristics and State of mind that are absolute inherent in object present in man and or identical with his behavior… .” From philosophical point of view value signifies the usefulness of a concept or ideals which an individual adopts be ...
1 Making Sense of Nietzsche`s “Truths”: Slavery, Misogyny and
... towards mediocrity and equality in society because this would mean that all are slaves, in this loose sense of slavery. So, Nietzsche’s argument might run like this: (1) it is a fact of life that some people are not strong enough to create their own value; (2) the creation of value is one of the hig ...
... towards mediocrity and equality in society because this would mean that all are slaves, in this loose sense of slavery. So, Nietzsche’s argument might run like this: (1) it is a fact of life that some people are not strong enough to create their own value; (2) the creation of value is one of the hig ...
Michael Josephson on Ethical Decision Making
... Ethical commitment refers to a strong desire to do the right thing, especially when behaving ethically imposes financial, social or emotional costs. Surveys taken by the Josephson Institute reveal that, regardless of profession, almost all people believe that they are, or should be, ethical. While m ...
... Ethical commitment refers to a strong desire to do the right thing, especially when behaving ethically imposes financial, social or emotional costs. Surveys taken by the Josephson Institute reveal that, regardless of profession, almost all people believe that they are, or should be, ethical. While m ...
Ethical Pluralism as a Framework for Discussing Moral
... Ethical relativism has several important insights: The need for tolerance and understanding The fact of moral diversity We should not pass judgment on practices in other cultures when we don’t understand them Sometimes reasonable people may differ on what’s morally acceptable ...
... Ethical relativism has several important insights: The need for tolerance and understanding The fact of moral diversity We should not pass judgment on practices in other cultures when we don’t understand them Sometimes reasonable people may differ on what’s morally acceptable ...
Chapter 19 PowerPoint Slides
... AN INTEGRATED APPROACH A process that integrates morality, economics, and law. The Nature of Moral Judgements Normative judgements express our values • good or bad ...
... AN INTEGRATED APPROACH A process that integrates morality, economics, and law. The Nature of Moral Judgements Normative judgements express our values • good or bad ...
Ethical Pluralism as a Framework for Discussing Moral Disagreement
... Ethical relativism has several important insights: The need for tolerance and understanding The fact of moral diversity We should not pass judgment on practices in other cultures when we don’t understand them Sometimes reasonable people may differ on what’s morally acceptable ...
... Ethical relativism has several important insights: The need for tolerance and understanding The fact of moral diversity We should not pass judgment on practices in other cultures when we don’t understand them Sometimes reasonable people may differ on what’s morally acceptable ...
What Is Ethics
... Ethics vs. Compliance As scandals swirl around the White House, President Bush has ordered his staff to take a refresher course in ethics. [See related Newsline story, Nov. 14.] Not a moment too soon, many would say. But there are two problems with the president's directive. First, as any organizat ...
... Ethics vs. Compliance As scandals swirl around the White House, President Bush has ordered his staff to take a refresher course in ethics. [See related Newsline story, Nov. 14.] Not a moment too soon, many would say. But there are two problems with the president's directive. First, as any organizat ...
PUBLIC SPEAKING
... all persons regardless culture. Progress from one stage to another. Changing from stage to stage is gradual. Some individuals move more rapidly than others through the sequence of stages. Although the particular stage of moral reasoning is not the only factor affecting people’s moral conduct ...
... all persons regardless culture. Progress from one stage to another. Changing from stage to stage is gradual. Some individuals move more rapidly than others through the sequence of stages. Although the particular stage of moral reasoning is not the only factor affecting people’s moral conduct ...
ethics 101 - Driehaus College of Business
... Socrates’ position was clear: Ethics consists when his subjects took courses in ethics of knowing what we ought and these courses chalto do, and such knowllenged them to look at … a common edge can be taught. Most issues from a universal psychologists today would point of view, they vocabulary with ...
... Socrates’ position was clear: Ethics consists when his subjects took courses in ethics of knowing what we ought and these courses chalto do, and such knowllenged them to look at … a common edge can be taught. Most issues from a universal psychologists today would point of view, they vocabulary with ...
Aphorism 257 - DigitalCommons@COD
... I cannot deny that every philosophical culture came from this aggressive origin that Nietzsche is referring to. I am unable to think of any that we wouldn't consider to be barbaric at some level or another from a modern perspective. This is probably because our perspective in part ties in with Chris ...
... I cannot deny that every philosophical culture came from this aggressive origin that Nietzsche is referring to. I am unable to think of any that we wouldn't consider to be barbaric at some level or another from a modern perspective. This is probably because our perspective in part ties in with Chris ...
Integrity and Ethics,Mr.Shiva Hari Adhikari
... Integrity is knowing right things to do and doing the right things. Integrity is not an absolute notion that you either have or totally lack. ...
... Integrity is knowing right things to do and doing the right things. Integrity is not an absolute notion that you either have or totally lack. ...
DOC - A Level Philosophy
... relative to my society, then morality has no authority over me (or anyone else). I can do whatever I like, as long as I don’t get caught. ‘Morality’ becomes no more than a matter of taste. And if this is so, then morality cannot provide any firm grounds for morally judging the practices of other peo ...
... relative to my society, then morality has no authority over me (or anyone else). I can do whatever I like, as long as I don’t get caught. ‘Morality’ becomes no more than a matter of taste. And if this is so, then morality cannot provide any firm grounds for morally judging the practices of other peo ...
Political ethics
... Ethics may be divided into three major areas of study: • Meta-ethics, about the theoretical meaning and reference of moral propositions and how their truth values (if any) may be determined • Normative ethics, about the practical means of determining a moral course of action • Applied ethics draws u ...
... Ethics may be divided into three major areas of study: • Meta-ethics, about the theoretical meaning and reference of moral propositions and how their truth values (if any) may be determined • Normative ethics, about the practical means of determining a moral course of action • Applied ethics draws u ...
scheler and philosophical anthropology
... human nature as the response to this crisis, contemporary philosophers from many camps, including analytic philosophers, poststructuralists and postmodernists, and feminists have argued that this was part of the problem. While one embraces a reflection on human nature, the other erases it from refle ...
... human nature as the response to this crisis, contemporary philosophers from many camps, including analytic philosophers, poststructuralists and postmodernists, and feminists have argued that this was part of the problem. While one embraces a reflection on human nature, the other erases it from refle ...
Ethical Decision-Making Guidelines and Tools
... ethics according to their own personal morality. However, resolving conflict depends on the more formal mechanism of ethics. Most of the time people do not make a distinction between morality and ethics, however, there is a difference. Morality refers to your own personal moral choices. Ethics r ...
... ethics according to their own personal morality. However, resolving conflict depends on the more formal mechanism of ethics. Most of the time people do not make a distinction between morality and ethics, however, there is a difference. Morality refers to your own personal moral choices. Ethics r ...
Ethical Egoism
... owners to pursue their own interest of maximum financial gain by capitalizing on what others are willing to pay to pursue their own interest of survival in the wake of natural ...
... owners to pursue their own interest of maximum financial gain by capitalizing on what others are willing to pay to pursue their own interest of survival in the wake of natural ...
Ressentiment (Scheler)
Max Scheler (1874–1928) was both the most respected and neglected of the major early 20th century German Continental philosophers in the phenomenological tradition. His observations and insights concerning ""a special form of human hate"" and related social and psychological phenomenon furnished a descriptive basis for his philosophical concept of ""Ressentiment"". As a widely recognized convention, the French spelling of this term has been retained in philosophical circles so as to preserve a broad sense of discursive meaning and application. Scheler died unexpectedly of a heart attack in 1928 leaving a vast body of unfinished works. Extrapolations from his thoughts have always since piqued interest and discussion on a variety of topics. His works were on the Nazi book burn list.As a concept belonging to the study of ethics, Ressentiment represents the antithetical process of Scheler's emotively informed non-formal ethics of values. But Ressentiment can also be said to be, at once, Scheler's darkest as well as his most psychological and sociological of topics, foreshadowing many later findings in those particular social sciences. Today we might associate Ressentiment with passive aggressive behavior: e.g., the power of labor unions to negotiate favorable work contracts through the use of strikes or production slow downs; or America's non-violent civil rights movement. But, folk wisdom comes closest to Scheler's meaning by recognizing Ressentiment as a self-defeating turn of mind which is non-productive and ultimately a waste of time and energy. Maturity informs most of us that sustained hatred hurts the hater far more than the object of our hate. Sustained hatred enslaves by preventing emotional growth to progress beyond the sense of pain having been precipitated, in some way, by whom or what is hated (i.e., another person, group or class of persons).