| William Robert Scott - 1900 - 324 pages
...principles of the late Earl of Shaftesbury are explained and defended, a9ainst the Author of the Table of the Bees; and the Ideas of Moral Good and Evil are established, accordin9 to the Sentiments of the Ancient Moralists: with an attempt to introduce a Mathematical... | |
| Victor Schönfeld - 1920 - 104 pages
...which the principles the late E ar ] of Shaftesbury are explainded and defended against the Author of the Bees ; and the Ideas of Moral Good and Evil are established according to ithe Sentiments oftheAncien Moralists with an attempt to introduce a Mathematical... | |
| Isabel Rivers - 2000 - 407 pages
...here it is worth noting an important clause on the title page of the first edition of the Inquiry: 'In which The Principles of the late Earl of SHAFTESBURY...according to the Sentiments of the Antient Moralists' This clause was deleted from subsequent editions of the Inquiry and replaced by a paragraph in the... | |
| Ruth Katz, Ruth HaCohen - 2003 - 462 pages
...Principles of the late Earl of SHAFTSBURY are explain'd and defended, against the Author of the Fahle of the Bees: AND THE Ideas of Moral Good and Evil are estahlish'd, according to the Sentiments of the antient Moralists. With and Attempt to introduce a... | |
| Michael B. Gill - 2006 - 266 pages
...and virtue; in two treatises. In which the principles of the late Earl of Shaftesbury areExplain'd and Defended, against the Author of the Fable of the...according to the Sentiments of the Antient Moralists (Beauty and Virtue [ist ed.] ii). In the preface to the second edition of his Inquiry, moreover, Hutcheson... | |
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