| Stanley Tweyman - 1995 - 600 стор.
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| David W. Augsburger - 1996 - 196 стор.
...of having it punished ... is by no means malice. No, it is resentment against vice and wickedness; it is one of the common bonds by which society is...fellow-feeling which each individual has in behalf of the whole species, as well as of oneself" (Butler 1896, 141). To love one's enemies, he says, is to encounter... | |
| Sharon Lamb, Jeffrie G. Murphy - 2002 - 289 стор.
...Butler notes that proper resentment can have social value: "resentment against vice and wickedness ... is one of the common bonds, by which society is held together" (1726/1970, p. 75). Since Butler, like Rawls, emphasizes that the object of resentment is wrongful... | |
| George Turnbull - 2003 - 536 стор.
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| David W. Augsburger - 2004 - 284 стор.
...of having it punished ... is by no means malice. No, it is resentment against vice and wickedness; it is one of the common bonds by which society is...fellow-feeling which each individual has in behalf of the whole species, as well as oneself (Butler 1726, 141). One can love one's enemies by also encountering them... | |
| Cheshire Calhoun Professor of Philosophy Colby College - 2003 - 404 стор.
...and cruelty," Butler viewed deliberate resentment, when not gmundless, extravagant or vengeful, as "one of the common bonds, by which society is held together; a fellow, feeling, which each individual has in behalf of the whole species." It is that ln which "Men... | |
| David Konstan - 2006 - 441 стор.
...injustice, and is directed 'against vice and wickedness.' As distinct from malice, this kind of resentment 'is one of the common bonds, by which society is held...fellow-feeling, which each individual has in behalf of the whole species, as well as of himself (141). 1 1 On the role of anger, as opposed to hatred, in justifying... | |
| Margaret Urban Walker - 2006 - 231 стор.
...will feel. Butler viewed deliberate resentment, when neither groundless, extravagant, nor vengeful, as "one of the common bonds, by which society is held...fellow-feeling, which each individual has in behalf of the whole species, as well as of himself." 8 It is that by which "Men are 5 See Smith, The Theory of Moral Sentiments:... | |
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