- A brief account of the history of logic, from the The Oxford Companion to Philosophy (edited by Ted Honderich), OUP 1997, 497-500.
- A biography of Peter Abelard, published in the Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol. 115, edited by Jeremiah Hackett, Detroit: Gale Publishing, 3-15.
- Philosophy in the Latin Christian West, 750-1050, in A Companion to Philosophy in the Middle Ages, edited by Jorge Gracia and Tim Noone, Blackwell 2003, 32-35.
- Ockham wielding his razor!
- Review of The Beatles Anthology, Chronicle Books 2000 (367pp).
- A brief discussion note about Susan James, Passion and Action: The Emotions in Seventeenth-Century Philosophy.
- Review of St. Thomas Aquinas by Ralph McInerny, University of Notre Dame Press 1982 (172pp). From International Philosophical Quarterly23 (1983), 227-229.
- Review of William Heytesbury on Maxima and Minima by John Longeway, D.Reidel 1984 (x+201pp). From The Philosophical Review 96 (1987), 146-149.
- Review of That Most Subtle Question by D. P. Henry, Manchester University Press 1984 (xviii+337pp). From The Philosophical Review 96 (1987), 149-152.
- Review of Introduction to the Problem of Individuation in the Early Middle Ages by Jorge Gracia, Catholic University of America Press 1984 (303pp). From The Philosophical Review 97 (1988), 564-567.
- Review of Introduction to Medieval Logic by Alexander Broadie, OUP 1987 (vi+150pp). From The Philosophical Review 99 (1990), 299-302.
Monday, November 16, 2009
"Critique of practical reason" by Immanuel Kant,1788
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Morality can claim objectivity and universality only by being founded on pure reason itself.
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Moral laws are universal and categorical because of their form,not their empirical content.
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The fundamental law of the pure practical reason is so to act that the maxim of the will could always function as a principle establishing universal law.
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Were it not for the moral law,man could never know himself to be free ;
for man,"thou ought" implies "thou canst".
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The rational postulates of the practical reason are that man is free,that the soul is immortal,and that God exists.
..
Morality can claim objectivity and universality only by being founded on pure reason itself.
.
Moral laws are universal and categorical because of their form,not their empirical content.
.
The fundamental law of the pure practical reason is so to act that the maxim of the will could always function as a principle establishing universal law.
.
Were it not for the moral law,man could never know himself to be free ;
for man,"thou ought" implies "thou canst".
.
The rational postulates of the practical reason are that man is free,that the soul is immortal,and that God exists.
..
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