| George Stuart Fullerton - Philosophy - 1922 - 404 pages
...beautiful and ugly, and becoming and unbecoming, and happiness and misfortune, and proper and improper, and what we ought to do and what we ought not to do, who ever came into the world without having an innate idea of them? " 1 Seneca adds his testimony to... | |
| Henry Dwight Sedgwick - Emperors - 1922 - 322 pages
...evil, the beautiful and the ugly, the becoming and the unbecoming, the proper and the improper, and what we ought to do and what we ought not to do, who has ever come into the world without an innate idea of them?" (Discourses, II, 11.) These innate... | |
| New York (State). Legislature - New York (State) - 1924 - 962 pages
...Representatives I, heard several speeches and they were mostly against our going in — what it meant — what we ought to do — and what we ought not to do along those lines. And after a bit there were men on both parties who saw that our course should be... | |
| 1924 - 592 pages
...do. But this joy of living will come only to the man who has learned self-discipline. Most of us know what we ought to do, and what we ought not to do. ln nine cases out of ten, physical breakdowns are not due to ignorance. They are due to lack of selfcontrol!... | |
| United States Congress. House. Banking and Currency Committee - 1947 - 644 pages
...Government boards and bureaus, and we get a little sick and tired of you men coming down and telling us what we ought to do and what we ought not to do. This is an illustration. We believe this provision, that I am discussing now, has merit. You throw... | |
| H. J. Paton - Philosophy - 1971 - 288 pages
...the point of view of agentss and not of logicians. we shall find that it throws a flood of light upon what we ought to do and what we ought not to do. The difference between the good man and the average sensual man is surely that the former recognises... | |
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