Axiology


Forgers and Critics: Creativity and Duplicity in Western Scholarship
Moral Man and Immoral Society: Study in Ethics and Politics
Death and the Afterlife
Collected Works of William Petty
General Theory of Value
A Grammar of Motives
A Rhetoric of Motives
The Art of Dialectic between Dialogue and Rhetoric (Controversies)
Reason in the Balance: An Inquiry Approach to Critical Thinking
Ars Topica: The Classical Technique of Constructing Arguments from Aristotle to Cicero (Argumentation Library, 15)
Elizabethan Rhetoric: Theory and Practice (Ideas in Context, Series Number 63)
Justification and Legitimacy: Essays on Rights and Obligations
Valuation: Its Nature and Laws (Muirhead Library of Philosophy)
Morality without Foundations: A Defense of Ethical Contextualism
Moral Theory: An Introduction (Elements of Philosophy)
Max Scheler
Love loves and in loving always looks beyond what it has in hand and possesses. The driving impulse [*Triebimpuls*] which arouses may tire out; love itself does not tire. This *sursum corda* which is the essence of love may take on fundamentally different forms at different elevations in the various regions of value. The sensualist is struck by the way the pleasure he gets from the objects of his enjoyment gives him less and less satisfaction while his driving impulse stays the same or itself in ...more
Max Scheler

Max Scheler
All that is worthy of love [*die Liebenswürdigkeiten*], from the viewpoint of God's comprehensive love, might have been stamped and created by this act of love; man's love does not so stamp or create its objects. Man's love is restricted to recognizing the objective demand these objects make and to submitting to the gradation of rank in what is worthy of love. This gradation exists in itself, but in itself it exists "for" man, ordered to his *particular* essence. Loving can be characterized as c ...more
Max Scheler

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