The Varieties of Goodness

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出版者:Routledge & Kegan Paul
作者:George Henrik von Wright
出品人:
页数:0
译者:
出版时间:1963
价格:0
装帧:Hardcover
isbn号码:9780710036148
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图书标签:
  • 哲学
  • 人类学
  • 哲学
  • 伦理学
  • 道德
  • 价值观
  • 幸福
  • 人生意义
  • 道德哲学
  • 实用主义
  • 社会伦理
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历史的褶皱:权力、信仰与人类境遇的千年回响 一部跨越文明的宏大叙事,探究人类社会结构与精神图景的演变 作者:[虚构作者名:埃利亚斯·凡·德·威尔德] (约1500字) 这部鸿篇巨制并非专注于某一特定学科或地域的狭隘考察,而是以一种近乎全景式的视野,描摹了自古典时代伊始,至近代工业革命前夜,人类社会如何在权力结构、集体信仰和技术变革的复杂张力下,塑造出其独特的文明形态。本书深入剖析了权力如何从神授的合法性中脱胎,过渡到世俗契约的基础,以及信仰体系如何在不同历史阶段成为维系或瓦解社会秩序的核心力量。 全书结构紧凑,分为“起源的迷雾”、“帝国的铁与血”、“信仰的疆界”和“理性的觉醒”四大部,每一部分都通过对关键历史节点的深入剖析,揭示了人类社会运行的深层逻辑。 --- 第一部:起源的迷雾——城邦的诞生与早期秩序的构建 本部分聚焦于古代近东和地中海文明的早期阶段,着重考察了国家形态诞生的社会、经济和精神前提。作者并未满足于传统的线性叙事,而是通过对美索不达米亚泥板文献、古埃及圣书文本的细致解读,重构了早期官僚体系与神庙祭司阶层之间复杂的权力交换网络。 重点探讨了“轴心时代”之前,权力与宗教是如何融为一体,构建出一种超越个体生命的历史观。例如,在苏美尔城邦的兴衰过程中,灌溉系统的管理如何成为祭司阶层掌握社会资源的关键,进而固化了早期的社会等级。随后,笔锋转向古希腊城邦的兴起,并非简单赞美雅典的民主实验,而是细致考察了斯巴达公民权的严格界定、奴隶制度的经济基础,以及哲学家们(如柏拉图与亚里士多德)对其政治形态的批判与辩护,展现了早期“公民”身份的排他性和脆弱性。 这一部分特别关注了早期法律的起源,如汉谟拉比法典中的“同态复仇”原则,如何从纯粹的血亲复仇演变为国家机器对暴力的垄断,以及这种垄断如何标志着社会从部落结构向早期国家的质变。 --- 第二部:帝国的铁与血——扩张、同化与统治的艺术 本书的第二部分将目光投向了古典和后古典时代建立的庞大帝国体系,特别是罗马帝国与汉王朝的统治机制。作者认为,维持一个跨越广阔地域的帝国,核心挑战在于如何将异质的文化和地方势力整合进一个统一的行政框架内。 在对罗马的分析中,重点不是其军事成就,而是其“公民权”作为一种工具的演变——从最初的排他性特权,逐渐扩展为一种政治黏合剂,用以稳定边疆。本书详细分析了罗马法律体系的成熟,特别是“万民法”的形成,如何成为帝国治理的理性基石,即使在中央权力衰微之后,其法律精神依然影响了后世的欧洲。 相对照地,对汉王朝的考察则侧重于其“文官选拔制”与儒家意识形态的结合。作者论证了儒学如何从一种道德哲学,被系统地转化为国家意识形态,提供了一种超越地域和血缘的、对中央集权的忠诚基础。通过对地方豪强与中央集权之间持续的博弈分析,揭示了帝国周期性衰亡的内在结构性矛盾:官僚体系的自我膨胀与对基层社会的控制力衰减。 --- 第三部:信仰的疆界——救赎的许诺与中世纪的结构 本书的第三部分是关于宗教信仰如何重塑西方与中东社会秩序的深刻论述。作者将中世纪描绘为一个由“双重权力”(教会与世俗君主)共同构建的、充满张力的时代。 对于西方基督教世界的考察,本书避免将教会描述为单纯的压迫者,而是分析了修道院制度如何成为知识保存、农业创新(如三圃制推广)和早期金融活动(如高利贷禁令与例外情况的产生)的中心。重点在于“普世教会”的概念,如何提供了一个在政治分裂的欧洲内部,唯一有效的、具有跨国性质的身份认同。对“叙事权”的争夺——教会对圣物的解释权与教皇权力的扩张——是理解中世纪政治史的关键。 与此同时,本书也对伊斯兰世界的早期扩张进行了对比分析。考察了“乌玛”(Ummah)这一宗教共同体概念如何超越了传统的部落或民族界限,为阿拉伯帝国提供了空前的动员能力。穆斯林黄金时代的科学、医学与哲学成就,被置于对古典知识的继承、整合与超越的背景下进行考察,展示了知识生产与宗教中心(如巴格达的智慧宫)之间的共生关系。 --- 第四部:理性的觉醒——商业的勃兴与旧秩序的松动 本书的最后部分聚焦于中世纪晚期至文艺复兴前夜,一系列社会经济变革如何为现代性奠定基础。作者认为,商业的复兴(尤其是地中海沿岸的贸易网络)首先挑战了封建的土地基础权力,并在城市中催生了一种新的、以契约为基础的社会关系。 对意大利城邦(如佛罗伦萨、威尼斯)的分析,着重于“公共领域”的出现——即市民阶层开始就公共事务进行非宗教性的、基于利益计算的讨论。文艺复兴时期的“人文主义”并非仅仅是艺术风格的回归,而是对人类自身能力(Virtù)的重新肯定,这从根本上动摇了将个体价值完全依附于来世救赎的传统信仰体系。 最后,本书以对印刷术的革命性影响的探讨收尾。古腾堡的发明,使得知识的传播不再受制于修道院或宫廷的垄断,极大地加速了思想的流通速度,为随后的宗教改革和科学革命提供了物质基础。这种知识的“去中心化”,被视为是打破传统权力结构,迈向近代社会的重要转折点。 --- 结论: 《历史的褶皱》试图提供一个连续的、多维度的历史观,强调权力、信仰与物质基础之间的持续互动。它揭示了文明的“进步”并非一条直线,而是无数次在继承与颠覆、统一与分裂之间形成的复杂褶皱。本书对我们理解现代社会中权力分配、意识形态冲突以及身份认同构建的根源,提供了深刻而富于启发性的历史透视。它是一部邀请读者重新审视我们所处世界的宏大历史哲学著作。

作者简介

目录信息

1. The idea of the conceptual autonomy of morals -- a Kantian
tradition in ethics. A philosophic understanding of morality must be
based on a comprehensive study of the good in all its varieties 1
2. The idea of a sharp distinction between is and ought and between
fact and vatue -- a Humean tradition in ethics. Normative ethics and
meta-ethics. Doubts as to whether the two can be sharply
distinguished 2
3. Our inquiry is conceptual. Remarks on the nature of conceptual
investigations. Moral words in search of a meaning. The moral
philosopher as a moulder of concepts. The importance of ethics to
our orientation in the world as moral agents 4
4. Division of ethically relevant concepts into three main groups, viz.
value-concepts, normative concepts, and anthropological
(psychological) concepts. Concepts between the groups. The
narrow and the broad approach to ethics. The broad approach and
the idea of a Philosophical Anthropology. The broad approach and
a General Theory of Norms and Values 6
5. The Varieties of Goodness. Illustration of the multiplicity of uses of
the word 'good' by means of examples. Distinction of some
principal forms of goodness 8
6. The forms of goodness are not species of a generic good. Note on
the concept of form 12
7. The multiform nature of goodness is not due to an ambiguity of the
word or a vagueness of the concept. The variety of forms of the 13
good not a variety of analogical meanings. Is goodness a familyconcept?
The meaningpattern of 'good' as a problem for
philosophical semantics
8. Affinities between the forms of goodness. So-called moral
goodness not an independent form of the good 17
1. Preliminary explanation of instrumental and technical goodness.
The instrumentally or technically good thing is often, but not
necessarily, good of its kind 19
2. Instrumental goodness is primarily goodness for a purpose.
Instrumental goodness of its kind presupposes an essential
connexion between kind and purpose. Functional and
morphological characteristics of kinds. The question of unity of the
kind 20
3. In the realm of instrumental goodness the opposite of 'good' is
'poor'. Difference between 'poor' and 'bad'. There is no instrumental
badness 22
4. 'Good' and 'poor' connote contradictories rather than contraries.
Poorness a privation 23
5. Judgments of instrumental goodness or betterness are objectively
true or false. The subjective setting of any such judgment. The
notion of a good-making property. Vagueness and instrumental
goodness 24
6. Sentences expressing judgments of instrumental goodness have a
descriptive content or sense. Why they should not be called
'descriptive sentences'. Distinction between the sense of a sentence
and its use 30
7. Instrumental goodness and commending. Why does goodness
appeal? 30
8. Instrumental goodness and preferential choice. Distinction between
the real and the apparent good. A man necessarily prefers, with a
view to a given purpose, the thing which he judges better for that
purpose 31
9. Technical goodness is primarily goodness at something. Technical
goodness of its kind presupposes an essential connexion between
kind and activity. Technical goodness is acquired and not innate 32
10. In the realm of technical goodness the opposite of 'good' is called
'poor' or 'bad'. The opposition is between contradictories rather than
contraries. Technical badness is a privative notion 34
11. Tests of technical goodness. Competition and achievement tests.
Tests by symptoms and by criteria. The technical goodness of
professionals is secondary to instrumental goodness. Note on the
creative arts. Goodness and greatness 35
12. Technical goodness, commending, and praising. Technical
goodness and keenness on activity. A man necessarily wants to
practise an art on which he is keen as well as possible 39
1.
-viii
a sub-category of the useful. The beneficial presupposes the notion
of the good of a being 41
3. Relations between instrumental and utilitarian goodness.
Instrumental goodness as a degree of usefulness 43
4. The opposites of the useful and the beneficial. The broad and the
narrow sense of 'harmful'. Two senses of 'evil' 45
5. Remarks on the logic of causal efficacy in the sphere of utilitarian
goodness. The meanings of 'favourable' and 'adverse' 47
6. Are judgments of utilitarian goodness objective? The axiological
and the causal components of judgments of the beneficial and the
harmful 48
7. Which kind of being has a good? Good and life 50
8. Medical goodness -- the goodness of organs and faculties. Relations
to instrumental and technical goodness. Essential functions of a
being. The concept of normalcy 51
9. The tripartite division well-weak-ill and the bipartite division goodbad.
Illness as basic notion. Weakness as potential illness. 'Good'
means 'all right'. Note on aitia 54
10. Pain and frustration logically constitutive of badness of organs.
Badness and sub-normal performance 56
11. Goodness of faculties. The social aspect of mental illness 58
12. 11. Are judgments of medical goodness objective? 60
13. 12. Health, illness, and the good of a being. The ethical significance
of medical analogies (Plato) 61
1. Pleasure insufficiently discussed in literature. Distinction between
passive and active pleasure and the pleasure of satisfaction 63
2. Passive pleasure. The good-tasting apple as example. Primary and
secondary hedonic judgments 65
3. Criticism of the view that pleasantness is a sensible quality 67
4. Pleasure and its contraries. The concept of pain 69
5. Analysis of secondary hedonic judgments. An analogy to the
emotive theory in ethics. Distinction between third and first person
hedonic judgments. The first person judgments express valuations
and lack truth-value. The third person judgments are about
valuations. They are true or false -- but no value-judgments 71
6. The logical form of primary hedonic judgments. How is mention of
a valuating subject to be worked into the overt formulation of the
value-judgment? The liking-relation 75
7. Active pleasure. Liking to do and wanting to do 77
8. Discussion of Psychological Hedonism. The doctrine misinterprets
the necessary connexion between pleasure and satisfaction of desire
as being a necessary connexion between desire and pleasure as its
object 79
9. Can a man desire the unpleasant? 84
10. Remarks on Ethical Hedonism. Pleasure is not the sole good, but all 84
forms of the good may have an intrinsic relationship to pleasure
1. Welfare the good of man. Distinction between welfare and
happiness. Happiness the consummation of welfare 86
2. Happiness, welfare, and ends of action. Discussion of the position
of Aristotle. Refutation of Psychological Eudaimonism. A man can
pursue his own happiness as ultimate end, and the happiness of
others as an intermediate or an ultimate end of his action. Welfare
only 'obliquely' an end of action. Welfare as ultimate end and
beings as 'ends in themselves' 88
3. Ideals of happiness. Happiness and passive pleasure. Criticism of
Epicurean ideals. Happiness and contentedness. Criticism of ascetic
ideals. Happiness and active pleasure 92
4. The conditions of happiness. Happiness as conditioned by luck,
internal disposition, and action 94
5. The mutability and permanence of happiness. The analogical pairs:
pleasant-unpleasant, glad-sad, happy-unhappy 96
6. Analogy between eudaimonic and hedonic judgments. To be happy
is to like one's circumstances of life 97
7. First person judgments of happiness express valuations, third
person judgments are true of false statements about the way men
value their circumstances of life. Insincere first person judgments.
Ultimately the subject is judge in his own case 99
8. The causal component involved in judgments of welfare.
Consequences and causal prerequisites of changes, which affect the
good of man 101
9. Things wanted and unwanted in themselves -- an analogue to the
concept of intrinsic value 103
10. Ends of action and things wanted in themselves both fall under the
category 'goods'. How they are mutually related 104
11. A good and its price. The constituents of a man's good determined.
Things beneficial and harmful defined as the nuclei of the positive
and negative constituents of a man's good. The concept of need 105
12. Distinction between the apparent and the real good of a man.
Judgments of welfare depend upon knowledge of causal
connexions. The limitations of man's capacity of judging correctly
in matters relating to his welfare 108
13. The problem of the 'objectivity' of judgments concerning that which
is good or bad for a man 110
1. The notion of regret. Repeatable and non-repeatable choices, which
are relevant to the good of man. The choice of a life. Note on
akrasia 112
1. Technical goodness and 'good' as an attribute of actindividuals 114
2. Instrumental goodness and acts. The notion of a 'way of doing'
something. The conncxion between way of doing and thing done is
intrinsic 115
3. Utilitarian goodness and acts. The connexion between an act as
means and an achievement as end is extrinsic 115
4. The beneficial and the harmful as attributes of acts. The notion of
doing good (bad, evil, harm) to some being 117
5. The moral goodness and badness of acts is not an independent form
of the good, but has to be accounted for in terms of the beneficial
and the harmful. A sense in which moral goodness (badness) is
'absolute' and 'objective' -the beneficial (harmful) again is 'relative'
and 'subjective' 119
6. On the possibility of judging of the overall beneficial or harmful
nature of an act from the point of view of the good (welfare) of a
community of men 120
7. Criticism of a suggested definition of moral goodness and badness
in terms of the beneficial and harmful nature of action. The moral
quality of an act essentially depends upon the agent's intention in
acting and his foreseeing of good and harm to others 121
8. Intention. The relation between the intention in acting and the
foreseeing of consequences. Foreseen consequences of action are
not necessarily intended results of action. Distinction between the
intentional and the not unintentional 123
9. 'Good' as an attribute of intentions. 'Good intention' and 'intention
to do good'. The notion of the intended good (bad). Distinction
between the factual and the axiological object of intention. The
utilitarian value of good intcntions for the promotion of good 125
10. A suggested definition of morally good and bad intention in acting
and of morally good and bad acts 128
11. The concept of unavoidable bad. Discussion of the conditions,
under which an act, from which some bad is foreseen to follow, is
not a morally bad act 130
12. The good man. Instrumental, technical, and utilitarian goodness of
men. Benevolence and malevolence as attributes of character. The
good man and the virtuous man 133
1. Virtue -- a neglected topic in modern ethics 136
2. Note on the words arete,virtus, and 'virtue'. The logical
inhomogeneity of the concept. Distinction between the concept of
virtue and the concept of a virtue. Here we are interested only in the
second 137
3. A virtue is neither an innate nor an acquired skill in any particular
activity. Comparison between a virtue and a technical excellence or
the goodness of a faculty 139
4. Acts in accordance with a virtue do not form an actcategory. The
genus of a virtue is neither that of disposition nor that of habit 141
5. The genus of virtues is state of character. Comment on Aristotle's
division into moral and intellectual virtues. Note on the concept of
character 143
6. Virtue is concerned with the choice of a right course of action in a
particular situation, when the good of some being is at stake 145
7. Virtuous choice the outcome of a contest between 'reason' and
'passion'. The virtuous man has learnt to conquer the obscuring 146
effects of passion upon his practical judgment. Right choice in
accordance with virtue is not necessarily the choice of a so-called
virtuous act
8. The problem of the unity of the virtues. The various virtues as so
many forms of self-control. Note on sophrosyne 148
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我一直认为,阅读的最高境界,并非是获取知识,而是能够引发深刻的自我反思。而这本书,恰恰做到了这一点,而且做得相当出色。从书名就能看出,它探讨的是“善”的多种面向,而作者并没有满足于泛泛而谈,而是深入到每一个细微之处,去剖析“善”的来源、表现以及它在我们社会中所扮演的角色。我最欣赏的是作者的洞察力,他能够看到那些隐藏在日常琐事中的微小善意,也能够揭示那些伟大善举背后复杂的心理动机。书中穿插的那些历史典故和人物传记,更是为他的论点增添了说服力,让我对“善”的理解不再是单一的、线性的,而是变得更加立体、更加丰富。我读这本书的时候,常常会因为书中的某个例子而感到震撼,然后会停下来,问自己:“我是否也曾经有过这样的选择?或者,我是否也曾经忽略过这样的善意?”这种内省的过程,让我对自己的道德认知有了更深的体察。这本书不是那种一蹴而就的启示录,而是需要你慢慢去咀嚼,去品味,然后让它在你心中生根发芽,悄悄地改变你对世界的看法。

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说实话,我是一个对哲学和伦理学有些兴趣但又觉得它们过于晦涩的人。而这本书,完全打破了我对这一类书籍的刻板印象。作者的语言风格非常吸引人,他用一种流畅而富有感染力的方式,带领读者走进“善”的世界。我特别喜欢他通过一系列引人入胜的故事和案例,来阐释那些复杂的道德哲学概念。你不会感觉到是在被灌输知识,反而更像是在参与一场精彩的辩论,或者是一次深入的田野调查。他对不同文化、不同时代关于“善”的理解的比较,也让我大开眼界。我之前总以为“善”是一种普适的概念,读了这本书才明白,原来它有如此多的变体,如此多的诠释方式。书中的每一个观点,都似乎在我的脑海里激起涟漪,让我对那些曾经被我轻易忽略的道德维度有了全新的认识。我读完之后,感觉整个人的思维都变得更加开阔了,也更加能够理解和包容那些与自己不同的人和观点。这本书绝对是一本值得推荐的读物,无论你是对哲学感兴趣,还是仅仅想对人性有更深的理解,它都能给你带来意想不到的收获。

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这本书我拿到手已经有一段时间了,但直到最近才有机会真正沉浸其中。我得说,它真的给我带来了一种前所未有的阅读体验,就像是打开了一个全新的视角,让我开始重新审视那些我一直以来习以为常的概念。作者的笔触极其细腻,仿佛在用放大镜解剖那些抽象的“善”的形态,从最朴素的乐于助人,到那些更深层次的、涉及到牺牲和自我超越的伟大情操,都被他一一呈现出来,而且是那么的有条理,那么的令人信服。我尤其喜欢他对于不同文化背景下,人们对“善”的理解和实践的对比分析,这不仅仅是理论上的阐述,更充满了活 力的案例,让我仿佛置身于那些多元的场景之中,感受着那里的人情冷暖和道德选择。读这本书的过程中,我发现自己会不自觉地停下来,去思考自己过往的行为,去衡量那些曾经被我忽略的微小善举,以及那些我曾以为理所当然的事情背后,所蕴含的深刻意义。它不是那种速食的读物,你需要花时间和精力去消化,去反刍,但这种思考的过程本身,就是一种巨大的收获。我强烈推荐给所有对人生、对人性、对道德有深入探究兴趣的朋友,相信你们也会像我一样,从中获得启发和成长。

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这本书的阅读过程,对我来说更像是一场智识上的探险。我一直对人类的道德行为和动机感到好奇,而这本书恰恰满足了我这种探索欲。作者的写作风格非常独特,他不是简单地罗列理论,而是通过大量的历史事件、哲学思辨,以及鲜活的人物故事,来阐释“善”的多种形态。我尤其喜欢他对于那些“不那么明显”的善意的挖掘,比如那些看似出于利益却最终导向了积极结果的行为,或者那些在特定情境下,看似“错误”却蕴含着深刻道德考量的选择。这些都极大地拓展了我对“善”的理解边界。书中的逻辑严谨,论证有力,但又不像学术论文那样枯燥,反而充满了人文关怀的温度。我经常会发现自己因为书中的某个观点而陷入沉思,然后会回过头来,对照自己的人生经历,去思考其中的关联。这本书带来的不仅仅是知识的增长,更是一种思维方式的转变,让我能够以更辩证、更深刻的角度去审视自己和他人的行为。它是一本需要反复阅读、细细品味的佳作,我相信每一次阅读都会有新的发现和感悟。

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老实说,一开始拿到这本书时,我并没有抱太大的期待。毕竟,“善”这个概念太大了,太容易流于空泛和说教了。然而,这本书的出现,彻底颠覆了我的固有印象。它不是那种高高在上、贩卖心灵鸡汤的书,而是用一种极其接地气、甚至可以说是调查研究的方式,去探索“善”的本质。作者就像一个孜孜不倦的社会学家,穿梭于不同的群体,观察、倾听,然后将那些零散的、有时甚至是矛盾的“善”的碎片,巧妙地编织成一幅宏大的画卷。我印象特别深刻的是他对于那些在困境中依然选择善良的人的描写,那些场景,那种力量,读来让人热血沸腾,同时又带有一丝沉甸甸的思考——为什么在最艰难的时刻,善良依然能够绽放?书中对于不同“善”的分类和界定,也做得非常出色,它让你明白,“善”并非只有一种面孔,它有无数种变体,每一种都承载着不同的价值和意义。这本书更像是一面镜子,照出了我们内心深处的善良,同时也提醒我们,在追求“善”的道路上,还有如此多的可能性值得去探索和践行。我读完后,感觉整个人都被洗礼了一遍,对世界的看法也更加多元和包容了。

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搞基搞得非常好(这是个代数学的隐喻,此处具体为善、规则、心理学/人类学3个基),揭示善概念的heterogeneity很详尽。Mark §1.7区分vagueness/ambiguity,§2借对比诸多opposites考察诸种善,§4.2区分第一/第二快乐主义价值判断,§4.3说愉悦不是感觉质,§4.4认为痛苦也不是,§8.2区分规范的3种语言对应:imperative/deontic/anankastic,§8.5区分productive/necessary means,等等。比Vendler的语义分析工作更细致全面,在线阅读:https://www.giffordlectures.org/books/varieties-goodness

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搞基搞得非常好(这是个代数学的隐喻,此处具体为善、规则、心理学/人类学3个基),揭示善概念的heterogeneity很详尽。Mark §1.7区分vagueness/ambiguity,§2借对比诸多opposites考察诸种善,§4.2区分第一/第二快乐主义价值判断,§4.3说愉悦不是感觉质,§4.4认为痛苦也不是,§8.2区分规范的3种语言对应:imperative/deontic/anankastic,§8.5区分productive/necessary means,等等。比Vendler的语义分析工作更细致全面,在线阅读:https://www.giffordlectures.org/books/varieties-goodness

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搞基搞得非常好(这是个代数学的隐喻,此处具体为善、规则、心理学/人类学3个基),揭示善概念的heterogeneity很详尽。Mark §1.7区分vagueness/ambiguity,§2借对比诸多opposites考察诸种善,§4.2区分第一/第二快乐主义价值判断,§4.3说愉悦不是感觉质,§4.4认为痛苦也不是,§8.2区分规范的3种语言对应:imperative/deontic/anankastic,§8.5区分productive/necessary means,等等。比Vendler的语义分析工作更细致全面,在线阅读:https://www.giffordlectures.org/books/varieties-goodness

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搞基搞得非常好(这是个代数学的隐喻,此处具体为善、规则、心理学/人类学3个基),揭示善概念的heterogeneity很详尽。Mark §1.7区分vagueness/ambiguity,§2借对比诸多opposites考察诸种善,§4.2区分第一/第二快乐主义价值判断,§4.3说愉悦不是感觉质,§4.4认为痛苦也不是,§8.2区分规范的3种语言对应:imperative/deontic/anankastic,§8.5区分productive/necessary means,等等。比Vendler的语义分析工作更细致全面,在线阅读:https://www.giffordlectures.org/books/varieties-goodness

评分

搞基搞得非常好(这是个代数学的隐喻,此处具体为善、规则、心理学/人类学3个基),揭示善概念的heterogeneity很详尽。Mark §1.7区分vagueness/ambiguity,§2借对比诸多opposites考察诸种善,§4.2区分第一/第二快乐主义价值判断,§4.3说愉悦不是感觉质,§4.4认为痛苦也不是,§8.2区分规范的3种语言对应:imperative/deontic/anankastic,§8.5区分productive/necessary means,等等。比Vendler的语义分析工作更细致全面,在线阅读:https://www.giffordlectures.org/books/varieties-goodness

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