The Privy Fisherman

“Shortly after, Mr. Weston came over with some of the fishermen, under another name, and the disguise of a blacksmith, where he heard of the ruin and dissolution of his colony...so uncertain are the mutable things of this unstable world. And yet men set their hearts upon them, though they daily see the vanity thereof.” – William Bradford’s Of Plymouth Plantation

Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Moral Argument for Other Minds

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        The following is a moral argument for the existence of other minds. If it is granted that we have a moral obligation to other people...
Wednesday, November 19, 2014

fragment

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        ...the rhetoric of the pursuit of virtue includes exhortations to actions that fulfill an end. On the whole, the main goal is better...
Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Criticism of Contempt

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Perhaps the contempt that one has of things is because that they are common. But also it is because no propriety is used when they are bein...
Thursday, September 4, 2014

Who Killed Homer?

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    Hanson and Heath, Classicists from California, co-authored a book called 'Who Killed Homer', which was eventually published in p...
Friday, May 30, 2014

Interpretation

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The world of things is made more consumable for those looking for relief through a story. The present set of facts, though, is not the same ...
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