@article{oai:kagawa-u.repo.nii.ac.jp:00002070, author = {石川, 徹 and Ishikawa, Toru}, journal = {香川大学教育学部研究報告 第Ⅰ部, Memoirs of the Faculty of Education, Kagawa University. Part I}, month = {Mar}, note = {In this paper, the author attempts to examine the first principles of morals. Reid says they are self‐evident and the foundations of all our moral judgment. But they don't seem to be what Reid maintains. The author thinks we have to reconsider the exact meaning of Reid's way of thinking in Philosophy., Firstly, the author points out something curious in Reid's writings and considers they reflect the fact that his thoughts could not subsist in itself. Without reference to David Hume's Philosophy we cannot understand Reid's System adequately., Secondly, the author examines Reid's principles individually and observes they are collections of different kinds. This result makes us reconsider their character and roles in Reid's theory, especially in relation to his concept of “common Sense”., Finally the author concludes we have to reexamine the relation between common sense and systems of philosophy in fundamentally different way. It is the only way to interpret Reid's Philosophy consistently.}, pages = {63--70}, title = {トマス・リードの心の哲学(8)—道徳の第一原理について—}, volume = {143}, year = {2015}, yomi = {イシカワ, トオル} }