| James Kellenberger - 2008 - 110 pages
...all of us human beings, for like it or not we all operate in the moral sphere, making decisions about what we ought to do and what we ought not to do. Moral relativism has implications for each moral breath we take. Many today are aware of the pervasive... | |
| James Adam - 1981 - 260 pages
...innate notions" on such subjects as good and evil, honourable and base, the becoming and the unbecoming, what we ought to do and what we ought not to do', etc. These "innate notions " were called in Stoicism C/A^UTOI irpoXi^eis : and they were strictly limited... | |
| Walter H. Conser - 1984 - 374 pages
...discovery. "Christian doctrine," Arnold maintained, "is no more than a law of duties, a statement of what we ought to do, and what we ought not to do." Arnold's concept of the Bible paralleled his concept of the church. As he saw the ideal church stressing... | |
| 1922 - 672 pages
...respect and influences public opinion, that it may be of real value in advising us, the bureaucrats, what we ought to do and what we ought not to do. I can say at once that it is not our wish to destroy beautiful places, but when you hear figures quoted... | |
| United Spanish War Veterans. Dept. of New York - 1924 - 202 pages
...Representatives I, heard several speeches and they were mostly against our going in — what it meant — what we ought to do — and what we ought not to do along those lines. And after a bit there were men on both parties who saw that our course should be... | |
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