- In
French literature, the
moralists (French:
moralistes) were a
tradition of
secular writers who
described "personal,
social and
political conduct", typically...
-
illiberal in the
judgments one makes". In
French literature, the
moralists (French:
moralistes) were a
tradition of
secular writers who
described "personal...
- la bʁɥijɛʁ]; 16
August 1645 – 11 May 1696) was a
French philosopher and
moralist, who was
noted for his satire. Jean de La Bruyère was born in Paris, in...
- The
Moralist (Italian: Il moralista) is a 1959
Italian comedy film
directed by
Giorgio Bianchi.
Starring Alberto Sordi and
Vittorio de Sica, it satirises...
-
morality of homo****uality.
Corvino is
sometimes referred to as "The ****
Moralist", a
sobriquet he ****umed
while writing a
column of the same name. John...
-
Goldberg and
others have
described Salanter as a "psychologist" as well as a
moralist.
After Salanter's death, the
Musar movement was led by his disciples, who...
- Freud: The Mind of the
Moralist (1959;
second edition 1961;
third edition 1979) is a book
about Sigmund Freud, the
founder of psychoanalysis, by the sociologist...
- Fabian: The
Story of a
Moralist (German: Fabian. Die
Geschichte eines Moralisten) is a 1931
novel by
German author Erich Kästner. An
English translation...
- "long-overdue".
Nietzsche expressed admiration for 17th-century
French moralists such as François de La Rochefoucauld, Jean de La Bruyère and Luc de Clapiers...
-
cannot be said to have a
universal contractual law. The
canonical and
moralist doctrine on this
subject is a
development of that
contained in the Roman...