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Human beings talk and co-operate, they build and produce, they work to accumulate and exchange, they form societies, laws and institutions, and, in all these things the phenomenon of reason—as a distinct principle of activity—seems dominant. There are indeed theories of the human which describe this or that activity as central—speech, say, productive labour (Marx), or political existence (Aristotle). But we feel that the persuasiveness of such theories depends upon whether the activity in question is an expression of the deeper essence, reason itself, which all human behaviour displays.
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- Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplements , Volume 18: Philosophy and Practice , September 1984 , pp. 255 - 273
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- Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy and the contributors 1984
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