George Berkeley and the Proofs for the Existence of God [Book Review]

Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 7:213-216 (1957)
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Abstract

OUR manuals of ethics distinguish between the ‘supreme’ and the ‘proximate’ norms of morality, the supreme norm being the ‘eternal law’ and the proximate norm ‘human reason’. They then sub-divide the proximate norm into ‘objective’ and ‘subjective’: the objective norm of morality is human reason taken as equivalent to the rational nature of man, with all the relationships which that nature essentially involves; the subjective norm is human reason understood as the particular faculty by which man apprehends his rational nature and its essential relationships as a norm of moral action.

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