James Dundas (c.1620-1679) wrote a 313-page manuscript Idea philosophiae moralis (The idea of moral philosophy). The book, which was unfinished at his death, has never been published. It covers a wide range of moral philosophical topics, including, at the end, questions relating to death. The last completed sections were on suicide, just war and duelling. In each of these sections Dundas takes into account theological principles that have their source in Calvin, or at least, more broadly in Reformed orthodoxy
Due to the character of the original source materials and the nature of batch digitization, quality ...
This paper is focused on the problem of evil in the thought of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Rousseau devia...
In our third consideration, we want to go into the primary field of moral. The essence of moral does...
This chapter focuses on the Scottish judge James Dundas, the first Lord Arniston, whose 313 page man...
James Dundas, first Lord Arniston (c.1620-1679), was a Scottish law lord who left at his death a 313...
In 1663, James Dundas, First Lord Arniston (c.1620–1679), a judge and a Covenanter, suffered from th...
In the manuscript Idea philosophiae moralis (1679), James Dundas (c.1620−1679), first Lord Arniston,...
James’s “The Moral Philosopher and the Moral Life” sheds light not only on his views on ethics but a...
The transition from medieval thought to what we usually consider as modem philosophy is a breakthrou...
Ralph McInerny, based on his understanding and interpretation of Aquinas’s moral theory, gives his i...
Saint Thomas More was born in England in 1478. He developed a love for the classics as a youth and a...
Saint Thomas More was born in England in 1478. He developed a love for the classics as a youth and a...
Inheritors of the Calvinist Reformed tradition have long disagreed about whether knowledge of God’s ...
Samuel Johnson's literary reputation in his own day was built largely upon his work as a moralist; c...
Recensión de: Michael V. DOUGHERTY, Moral Dilemmas in Medieval Thought. From Gratian to Aquinas, Cam...
Due to the character of the original source materials and the nature of batch digitization, quality ...
This paper is focused on the problem of evil in the thought of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Rousseau devia...
In our third consideration, we want to go into the primary field of moral. The essence of moral does...
This chapter focuses on the Scottish judge James Dundas, the first Lord Arniston, whose 313 page man...
James Dundas, first Lord Arniston (c.1620-1679), was a Scottish law lord who left at his death a 313...
In 1663, James Dundas, First Lord Arniston (c.1620–1679), a judge and a Covenanter, suffered from th...
In the manuscript Idea philosophiae moralis (1679), James Dundas (c.1620−1679), first Lord Arniston,...
James’s “The Moral Philosopher and the Moral Life” sheds light not only on his views on ethics but a...
The transition from medieval thought to what we usually consider as modem philosophy is a breakthrou...
Ralph McInerny, based on his understanding and interpretation of Aquinas’s moral theory, gives his i...
Saint Thomas More was born in England in 1478. He developed a love for the classics as a youth and a...
Saint Thomas More was born in England in 1478. He developed a love for the classics as a youth and a...
Inheritors of the Calvinist Reformed tradition have long disagreed about whether knowledge of God’s ...
Samuel Johnson's literary reputation in his own day was built largely upon his work as a moralist; c...
Recensión de: Michael V. DOUGHERTY, Moral Dilemmas in Medieval Thought. From Gratian to Aquinas, Cam...
Due to the character of the original source materials and the nature of batch digitization, quality ...
This paper is focused on the problem of evil in the thought of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Rousseau devia...
In our third consideration, we want to go into the primary field of moral. The essence of moral does...