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Alphabetical    [«  »]
monkey 1
monstrous 3
mood 1
moral 49
morally 3
more 201
moreover 17
Frequency    [«  »]
49 know
49 long
49 mind
49 moral
49 often
48 arguments
48 enthymemes
Aristotle
Rethoric

IntraText - Concordances

moral

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | not his faculty, but his moral purpose. In rhetoric, however, 2 I, 1 | knowledge of the art, or his moral purpose. In dialectic it 3 I, 1 | he has a certain kind of moral purpose, a "dialectician" 4 I, 1 | in respect, not of his moral purpose, but of his faculty.~ 5 I, 8 | Similarly, we should know the moral qualities characteristic 6 I, 8 | government, for the special moral character of each is bound 7 I, 8 | a good knowledge of the moral qualities and institutions 8 I, 10| according to the doersages, moral states, or the like; it 9 I, 10| in accordance with their moral qualities, their actions 10 I, 13| misfortune" is an act, not due to moral badness, that has unexpected 11 I, 13| an act, also not due to moral badness, that has results 12 I, 13| expected, but is due to moral badness, for that is the 13 II, 1 | of it: good sense, good moral character, and goodwill. 14 II, 1 | opinion, but because of their moral badness do not say what 15 II, 6 | first place, those due to moral badness. Such are throwing 16 II, 6 | other forms of badness of moral character, of the tokens 17 II, 6 | greater extent due to our moral badness. We are moreover 18 II, 9 | and is due to the same moral qualities. Both feelings 19 II, 9 | are associated with good moral character; it is our duty 20 II, 9 | associated with the same type of moral character. And their contraries 21 II, 9 | just or brave, or acquire moral goodness: but we shall not 22 II, 11| are objects of emulation, moral goodness in its various 23 II, 12| relation to the emotions and moral qualities, showing how they 24 II, 12| have discussed already. By moral qualities I mean virtues 25 II, 12| lives are regulated more by moral feeling than by reasoning; 26 II, 12| to choose what is useful, moral goodness leads us to choose 27 II, 13| by reasoning more than by moral feeling; reasoning being 28 II, 13| directed to utility and moral feeling to moral goodness. 29 II, 13| utility and moral feeling to moral goodness. If they wrong 30 II, 18| investing speeches with moral character may now be regarded 31 II, 18| invested with the required moral character. We are now to 32 II, 21| as future friends." The moral purpose should be implied 33 II, 21| important-it invests a speech with moral character. There is moral 34 II, 21| moral character. There is moral character in every speech 35 II, 21| every speech in which the moral purpose is conspicuous: 36 II, 21| a general declaration of moral principles: so that, if 37 II, 21| speaker as a man of sound moral character. So much for the 38 II, 22| character, emotions, and moral qualities. Let us now lay 39 III, 12| liberality", or any other moral excellence? Obviously agreeableness 40 III, 16| thing is the indication of moral purpose; the quality of 41 III, 16| have nothing to do with moral purpose, for they represent 42 III, 16| character, being concerned with moral questions. This end will 43 III, 16| manner now current, as by moral purpose: e.g. "I willed 44 III, 16| willed this; aye, it was my moral purpose; true, I gained 45 III, 17| demonstration can express neither moral character nor moral purpose. 46 III, 17| neither moral character nor moral purpose. Maxims should be 47 III, 17| bring them forward, and your moral discourse as well; if you 48 III, 17| enthymemes, then fall back upon moral discourse: after all, it 49 III, 17| regard to the element of moral character: there are assertions


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