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common good (philosophy) -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia
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common good

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Aspects of the topic common good are discussed in the following places at Britannica.

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  • communitarianism  (in  communitarianism (political and social philosophy): Varieties of communitarianism)

    It was not until the 1980s that the term gained currency through its association with the work of a small group of mostly American political philosophers who argued for the importance of the common good in opposition to contemporary liberals and libertarians, who emphasized the good for individuals, particularly including personal autonomy and individual rights. The Canadian philosopher...

  • effect of marketing  (in  marketing (business): Marketing and societal welfare)

    Concern also has been raised that some marketing practices may encourage excessive interest in material possessions, create “false wants,” or promote the purchase of nonessential goods. For example, in the United States, children’s Saturday morning television programming came under fire for promoting materialistic values. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) responded in the...

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  • Cumberland  (in  Richard Cumberland (British bishop and philosopher))

    ...foundation than this doctrine of “common consent.” In contrast to Hobbes, he set out to show that there are firmly established laws of nature that make it desirable for men to pursue the common good rather than their own particular advantage. The basic doctrine on which his theory depends is that the whole is exactly the same as all of its parts taken together, from which it follows...

  • Rousseau  (in  history of Europe: Rousseau and his followers)

    ...It is realized in the form of the general will, expressed in laws to which all submit. More than the sum of individual wills, it is general in that it represents the public spirit seeking the common good, which Rousseau defined as liberty and equality, the latter because liberty cannot subsist without it. He advocated the total sovereignty of the state, a political formula which depended...

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common good. (2011). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved from http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/128312/common-good

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