Tag Archives: the obligatory act
Iris Murdoch: Bringing Philosophy to Life
Iris Murdoch: Bringing Philosophy to Life When Jerry and I fly to California for another round of my neuropathy treatments, we each bring something to read en route. Obviously our selections have to be in paperback and short. Since I’d … Continue reading
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Tagged "Freddie lost his cool", A.J. Ayer's Language Truth and Logic, Abigail L. Rosenthal's What Ayer Saw When He Was Dead, acting rightly, airplane reading, arbitrary willing, Ayer's What I Saw When I Was Dead, background assumptions, contest of ideas, conversational implicature, deathbed regrets, eliminating nonsense, experiential layers, free will out of context, freedom of the will, Iris Murdoch's The Severed Head, Iris Murdoch’s The Sovereignty of Good, it has my name on it, knowledge and moral choice, logical positivism, moral choices, moral knowledge, neuropathy treatments, novels of ideas, Oxford and Cambridge, paperback books, pathbreaking women, philosophic about face, philosophic courage, philosophic novelist, Philosophy: The Journal of The Royal Institute of Philosophy, redeeming good deeds, reversing one's paradigm, That Undiscovered Country, the human story, the moral stakes, the obligatory act, the one best choice, the right note, the right stroke, the right word, The Vienna Circle, valuing truth, What do you mean?, women philosophers
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