British Moralists Being Selections From Writers Principally of the Eighteenth

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British Moralists Being Selections From Writers Principally of the Eighteenth
L a Lewis Amherst Selby Bigge
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All appetites and particular affections equally interested and disinterested, 233. Every good affection implies 406 INDEX.
desire.
the love of itself and becomes the object of a new affection, 243 (cf.
474)- \_Bentham. ~\ v. Motive, 397 f. , 402 n.
{jBalguy. ~] -v. End. Rational, dist. Instinctive, 555, 557, cf. 442. Dist. Complacency, 556. And pleasure, 724-7.
[Price. ~] is all desire to be ascribed to instinct ? 642 f. Of happiness requires no instinct, as pain is not a possible object of des
...ire, 643. May be derived from the nature of things and of beings, 644, and proceed from the perception of a purely reasonable creature, 645. Of knowledge and truth must arise in every intelligent mind, 647. A ' necessary cor- respondence, ' antecedent to arbitrary constitution, between certain affections and their objects, 648. When founded in and essential to the reasonable nature properly called affections ; when strengthened by instinct called passions ; both of these dist. Appetites, 650. Is all desire for pleasure?

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