The Party of Humanity: Writing Moral Psychology in Eighteenth-century BritainJohns Hopkins University Press, 2000 - 250 Seiten What is the relationship between the self and society? Where do moral judgements come from? As Blakey Vermeule demonstrates in this discussion, such questions about sociability and moral philosophy were central to 18th-century writers and artists. Vermeule focuses on a group of aesthetically complicated moral texts: Alexander Pope's character sketches and Dunciad, Samuel Johnson's Life of Savage, and David Hume's self-consciously theatrical writings on pride and his autobiographical writings on religious melancholia. These writers and their characters confronted familiar social dilemmas - sexual desire, gender identity, family relations, cheating, ambition, status, rivalry and shame - and responded by developing a practical ethics about their own behaviour at the same time that they refined their moral judgements of others. |
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Seite 148
... relation of blood pro- duces the strongest tie the mind is capable of in the love of parents to their children , and a lesser degree of the same affection , as the relation lessens " ( T 352 ) . Our love for others tends to weaken as ...
... relation of blood pro- duces the strongest tie the mind is capable of in the love of parents to their children , and a lesser degree of the same affection , as the relation lessens " ( T 352 ) . Our love for others tends to weaken as ...
Seite 158
... relationship between an actor's expression and his previous men- tal states , while doubting any actual connection between his expressions and " prior literal truth ” —indeed making the opacity of such a relation the real art of the ...
... relationship between an actor's expression and his previous men- tal states , while doubting any actual connection between his expressions and " prior literal truth ” —indeed making the opacity of such a relation the real art of the ...
Seite 166
... relation to me are separable from the subject of the cause ( that is , both the beauty and its relationship to me are separable from the house itself ) , and these separable impressions cause the ideas that further cause the impressions ...
... relation to me are separable from the subject of the cause ( that is , both the beauty and its relationship to me are separable from the house itself ) , and these separable impressions cause the ideas that further cause the impressions ...
Inhalt
The Art of Obligation | 29 |
Notes | 209 |
Works Cited | 229 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
abstraction Addison aesthetic Alexander Pope argued audience Baier become beliefs Book cause century character Christine Korsgaard claims Colley Cibber conflict Corr Cowper critics culture David Hume Dennis describes Dryden Dunciad E. O. Wilson Edited eighteenth eighteenth-century emotion empiricist ethics evolutionary evolutionary psychology family thinking feeling figure formalist friends friendship Garrick Hayley Hayley's Hume Hume's theory idea imagination impressions interest Johnson judgment Kant Kantian kin selection kind literary meaning melancholy metonymy mind moral psychology moralist motives nature normative object obligation paradox Party of Humanity passion person philosophical play pleasure poem poem's poet poetry political Pope's portrait proper names question quoted readers reason reciprocal altruism reference relation relationship rhetorical Richard Richard Wollheim Rorty satire Savage Savage's seems self-interest sense skepticism social sociobiology spectator Steven Knapp sublime theatrical theory of pride things thought tion tradition turn virtue Wharton William William Hayley writes Wycherley
Verweise auf dieses Buch
Bastards and Foundlings: Illegitimacy in Eighteenth-century England Lisa Zunshine Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2005 |