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coexist. That you can't say that I was compelled to do
this and therefore I had to foresake my free will. He would
say, "No, you can do some of both." This is very familiar
to me. You can divulge secrets and take torture at the same
time. You can do them both. Never totally successful either
way, but you don't break giving up.

Immanuel Kant, the categorical imperative from the
moral standpoint. His epistoemology to me is even more
interesting. He was a guy that put the recorded universe
not in the heavens, but in man's mind which I think has some
practicality. At least Heisenberg thought so. When he
tried to develop his mathematical quantum theory he relied
on this idea of a 19th century timid little guy who never
got more than 30 miles from his home, name Immanual Kent,
in which the concept of the mind as it pertains to him only
if God, freedom and immortality were presumed.

Sixth week. John Stuart Mill who has a little different
idea of ethics and different ideas of other things. Kant
and Mill were often seen to contrast. He also somehow later
figured he had to make everything come out within three
___________________ securely fasted to his philosophy.
That preoccupies people. They don't like to face that dilemma.
It's _______________, moral men that try to think that way.

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