About This Book
A series of essays examines human nature and ethics, arguing that intellectual and moral truths have deeper internal significance than merely physical facts; the author criticizes abstract philosophical jargon in favor of empirical observation, treats rights as negative limits defined by the absence of injury, describes the State as an institution for protecting individuals from wrong, and probes free will, character, moral instinct, and practical ethical reflections across connected meditations.
About the Author
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