They can also be read together to form a view of Kant's theory of aesthetics and teleology. |
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It is a model that applies both a human and a divine teleology through Thomas's hallmark ethics of natural law. |
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Traditionally, the field of normative ethics is discussed in terms of two broad categories of ethical orientation, deontology and teleology. |
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Their etiology and teleology are explicable within a moral and historical paradigm. |
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Pragmatism in ethics is often regarded as a form of teleology or consequentialism. |
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He fails to grasp the structural teleology of a composition, blithely ignoring any real legato. |
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Thus the appearance of teleology by itself is not sufficient to infer intelligent design. |
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Without some teleology, there is no flourishing and no future for the human community. |
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Thus, biologists 'subordinate' mechanism to teleology, and so the antinomic conflict between them is removed. |
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Decontextualized, cast out from their narrative teleology, these frozen images take on a whole new secret, deviant, implicit meaning. |
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Modern teleology is in no way contradictory to the research of science and reason. |
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No Hegelian teleology predetermined that Communism would be left on the ash heap of history. |
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Deontology assesses the morality of an action by the reasons for it and teleology judges the morality of an action by its consequences. |
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In the first part the author describes the thinking of Kant on the possibility and the limitations of teleology. |
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But sometimes the problem is thought to lie deeper, for example, in Kant's rationalism in moral theory and his ideas of teleology and race in anthropology. |
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This portrays a loose teleology, a soft concept of creation, one that permits genuine, though not ultimate, integrity and autonomy in the creatures. |
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Kant is an 18th century German philosopher whose work initiated dramatic changes in the fields of epistemology, metaphysics, ethics, aesthetics, and teleology. |
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That ground could unite both mechanism and teleology, by making both antinomic theses jointly derivable or explainable from it. |
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If hamartia is culpable error, tragedies that end up with calamities do not call into question the teleology of human events. |
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The two dominant theories are deontology and teleology. |
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After all, they argue, the evolutionary record shows plenty of lineages moving from complex structures to simpler ones, to say nothing of extinction — both of which throw cold water on the notion of teleology. |
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His critic of teleology echoes the precautions of the ethologists of his time, when they tackle the notion of instinct, further still the erroneous opposition between the acquired and the innate. |
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Those who held the former view recognized that some notion of function or teleology generally was uniquely suitable to biology and not eliminable from it. |
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The teleologist's emphasis on consequences has meant that teleology is often equated with, or closely associated with, the ethical theory known as consequentialism. |
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There is no alternative to this historical finalism, this teleology of universal history, other than that of the apocalyptic destruction not only of mankind but also of the planet and the cosmos! |
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Paley's teleology thus became the basis of the modern version of the teleological argument for the existence of God, also called the argument from design. |
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One class of such views defines teleological notions cybernetically and maintains that teleology in biology is appropriate insofar as biological systems are cybernetic systems. |
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Firstly, this new system will allow the funding for such parties to be withheld not on objective criteria but on criteria based on teleology and political purpose. |
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Although they had their own principles, institutions and teleology, those principles and rules were widely referred to and applied in different forums. |
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And thus we come to the third point around which our work hypothesis is organised, that regarding the specific teleology of the history of the peoples of the Mediterranean. |
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Central to the new natural law approach is an avoidance of metaphysics and a disavowal of biologistic teleology. |
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The following three chapters are concerned with Kant's socratism, his transcendental logic, and his treatment of teleology in the Third Critique. |
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Within this teleology, artworks must be treated as monophonic documents attesting to German painters' efforts to constitute their national identity. |
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Bagemihl's narrow-sightedness reveals itself most importantly in his deep suspicion of adaptationism or anything that smacks of the sin of teleology. |
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Asa Gray discussed teleology with Darwin, who imported and distributed Gray's pamphlet on theistic evolution, Natural Selection is not inconsistent with natural theology. |
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He posited natural teleology in its place, and believed that form was achieved for a purpose, citing the regularity of heredity in species as proof. |
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Once teleology is understood as teleonomy, Mayr has no objections to it. |
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