Thursday, August 9, 2007

Although siding in the main with Shaftesbury and Hutcheson, Brown



objects to their designation Moral Sense, as expressing the innate
power of moral approbation
Although siding in the main with Shaftesbury and Hutcheson, Brown
objects to their designation Moral Sense, as expressing the innate
power of moral approbation. If "Sense" be interpreted merely as
susceptibility, he has nothing to say, but if it mean a primary medium
of perception, like the eye or the ear, he considers it a mistake. It
is, in his view, an _emotion_, like hope, jealousy, or resentment,
rising up on the presentation of a certain class of objects. He farther
objects to the phrase "moral ideas," also used by Hutcheson. The moral
emotions are more akin to love and hate, than to perception or
judgment.


title=Marie Antoinette with the Year Sire:JAIKAY MUSIC MAKER 61039 1 (877) yazduniacirtype a disservice