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    Ideas that do not depend on extramental archetypes can be... — Carmelics
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    Home/Philosophy of Language
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    Supports→Moral laws can be known with the same necessity as mathematical principles.

    Ideas that do not depend on extramental archetypes can be universally and adequately conceived.

    Philosophy of LanguageTruth & Knowledge
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    Philosophy of LanguageTruth & Knowledge

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    Modality & Possibility2 linked

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    Justice & Punishment
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    By analogy, justice is understood perfectly because it does not rely on an extra...Modal ideas like justice and property refer to nothing outside the mind.Moral laws can be known with the same necessity as mathematical principles.Triangularity is known perfectly because it does not depend on the existence of ...

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    If there were natural kinds, they would be universals.74%By analogy, justice is understood perfectly because it does not rely o...73%Essences that are intrinsic and universally shared by all and only mem...73%Transient or non-universal features of a kind cannot constitute the es...73%

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    SEP: locke-moral
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    This might seem to be a tall order when considering the controversy generated by beliefs about moral rules, yet Locke clearly believes that moral rules can, with the right mental effort, yield indisputable universal laws. Locke offers an example of how this might work, by analyzing the moral proposition Where there is no property, there is no injustice. In order to see the demonstrable certainty of this claim, we have to examine the composite ideas and how those agree or disagree with one anothe

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