2 ideas
11911 | Some philosophers always want more from morality; for others, nature is enough [Blackburn] |
Full Idea: The history of moral theory is largely a history of battles between people who want more (truth, absolutes...) - Plato, Locke, Cudworth, Kant, Nagel - and people content with what we have (nature) - Aristotle, Epicurus, Hobbes, Hume, Stevenson. | |
From: Simon Blackburn (Précis of 'Ruling Passions' [2002], p.133) | |
A reaction: [Thanks to Neil Sinclair for this one] As a devotee of Aristotle, I like this. I'm always impressed, though, by people who go the extra mile in morality, because they are in the grips of purer and loftier ideals than I am. They also turn into monsters! |
22824 | Magna Carta forbids prison without trial, and insists on neutral and correct process [-, by Charvet] |
Full Idea: The Magna Carta forbids the King to imprison indefinitely without trial, and also binds the King to follow due process in his courts and not allow the justice provided to be for sale. | |
From: report of - (Magna Carta [1215]) by John Charvet - Liberalism: the basics 02 | |
A reaction: Very exasperating for a medieval monarch. In current times British law is exceedingly slow (so long imprisonment before trial), and the necessary effective advocates cost vastly too much for all but a tiny minority. So it's going badly. |