Your question is confusing, however, morality
ROUSSEAU
Thomas Hobbes is the philosopher that developed Social Contract Theory. John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau are also proponents of Social Contract Theory.
John Locke
Charles De Montesquieu
According to cosmopolitan theory, groups are members of a community. They have one belief in morality, economics, and political ideals that extends to all parts of their society.
Both accept that there was a time (if that word has meaning in this contest) when our Universe did not exist. The Steady State Theory (now almost completely rejected) held that our Universe is infinite in time and age. Both accept that our Universe came from SOMETHING. The former (basically) accepts that the something did not have intelligence, purpose, or morality; the latter accepts that the something did have those attributes.
The scientific movement accepts the Theory of Evolution. The Theory is the basis for the science of biology.
British political philosopher Edmund Burke (1729-1797)
No. The premise of the divine command theory is that morality is given to us by a divine entity, meaning some sort of god or gods. Atheists do not believe in the existence of any gods and therefore cannot believe that such beings are the source of morality.
Aristotle; tragedy
John Locke
A theory where you ask the 8 ball whether you should do something, and it gives you an answer. the answer is either a obligatory one, a wrong one, or a neutral one. The theory is Determinent, and not constent. :) Im curently researching for an Ethics midterm prompt over the Magic 8 Ball theory of morality
Plato
Platonic realism is the theory of reality according to Greek philosopher, Plato. It is explained in his Theory of Forms.
Nicholas Flamel is a legendary alchemist from the 14th century, known for achieving the philosopher's stone. There are no historical records of him actually writing a book. The idea of him writing a book is referenced in fiction, particularly in the Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling.
John Stuart Mill died on May 8, 1873 at the age of 66.
Carol Gillian