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Epicureans (100%) Information link


2. Nietzsche (88%) Information link
3. Stoics (84%) Information link
4. Spinoza (81%) Information link
5. Jean-Paul Sartre (76%) Information link
6. Kant (73%) Information link
7. David Hume (68%) Information link
8. Aristotle (63%) Information link
9. Aquinas (57%) Information link
10. Thomas Hobbes (54%) Information link
11. Jeremy Bentham (53%) Information link
12. Plato (50%) Information link
13. Ayn Rand (46%) Information link
14. John Stuart Mill (40%) Information link
15. Ockham (37%) Information link
16. Prescriptivism (34%) Information link
17. Nel Noddings (32%) Information link
18. Cynics (29%) Information link
19. St. Augustine (29%) Information link

The interests of others should not restrain us.


Logic cannot help us in some situations.
Reason alone must be used in deciding what is good and what is bad.
The end result of pleasure is what is significant.
God is not essential for his moral argument.

People are inherently evil; only the grace of god (or is it merit to be saved?) can save
them.
Salvation is found in a rejection of society and a return to simple ascetic living.
We should use an ethics of care: emphasizing love others, meeting needs, and nurturing.
Moral judgments are imperatives.
Faith and revelation, not philosophizing, allow one to know good and evil.

6th hour Ethics


Matthew Sullivan

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