Sentences with phrase «feelings about the morality»

And how I feel about the morality of horror games in VR will be determined by whether or not I'm able to keep the VR rig on the entire time or, as whenever I've tried to play The Brookhaven Experiment, I wind up ripping the rig off my head because I can't stand it anymore.

Not exact matches

They have questions they are desperate to ask their church leaders or friends, but somehow feel they can't; questions about its reliability, its nature and its morality especially around episodes such as those where God ordered the Israelites to obliterate their enemies.
For all of their ingenuity and their (perhaps considerable) merits, in other words, these accounts seem not to be talking about the same sort of thing that we have all along understood «morality» to be (or that we encounter when we feel ourselves subject to «moral» constraints).
She's not being delusional — she's engaging in an imaginative exercise in order to express her own feelings and morality about her son.
People with broad human sympathies and deep feelings are often reluctant to make moral judgments about others and often feel that morality is a cold and heartless business.
Whitehead would speak about this more on the level of feeling than in terms of rational morality, but the result might well be the same.
All of our feelings and questions about morality that define us as being human come down to one thing... our large brains.
If we now suppose this feeling of unity to be taught as a religion, and the whole force of education, of institutions, and of opinion directed, as it once was in the case of religion, to make every person grow up from infancy surrounded on all sides both by the profession and the practice of it, I think that no one who can realize this conception will feel any misgiving about the sufficiency of the ultimate sanction for the happiness morality.
It's hard not to feel for the beast, especially when he has done nothing wrong, knowing nothing about laws or morality, other than survival of the fittest.
Johnson's own laudable efforts to pass civil rights legislation, as much driven by his own morality as by political calculations about winning higher office, waned after he felt that Martin Luther King and others didn't cater enough to his prodigious - yet - fragile ego.
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