Parte, Capitolo, §
1 Forew | harmonic inequalities among the social classes, all of whose members
2 1, 3, 5 | intellectual, moral, and social unity in the mysterious
3 1, 3, 5 | extrinsic factors (cultural, social, economic, ethnic, geographic,
4 1, 3, 5 | gain spread throughout all social classes.~ Penetrating
5 1, 3, 5 | the common good, for which social authority is constituted," 5~
6 1, 3, 5 | being supported by higher social groups only in a subsidiary
7 1, 3, 5 | genuine elites, subverting the social hierarchy, fomenting utopian
8 1, 3, 5 | extinguishing the real life of the social groups, and subjecting everything
9 1, 4 | the religious, cultural, social, or economic life, the revolutionary
10 1, 6, 1(11)| Joseph Husslein, S.J., Social Wellsprings: Fourteen Epochal
11 1, 6, 5 | If it should occur in a social group, sooner or later,
12 1, 7, 2 | legitimacy of the entire social order, of all human institutions
13 1, 7, 3 | privileges inherent in every social body. No matter how much
14 1, 7, 3 | j. Equality in all social relations: between grown-ups
15 1, 8, 2 | soul, or even in a given social group, the disorder of the
16 1, 11, 3 | designations, a world with neither social nor economic inequalities,
17 2, 5, 2 | aspects: religious, political, social, economic, cultural, artistic,
18 2, 10, 2 | death.~· Favoring social customs and laws in which
19 2, 11, 1 | THE COUNTER-REVOLUTION AND SOCIAL ORGANIZATIONS~ ~
20 2, 11, 1 | dedicated to dealing with the social question and having in view,
21 2, 11, 1 | Works of Charity, Social Service, Associations of
22 2, 11, 1 | that these works normalize social and economic life, they
23 2, 11, 1 | systematically favor one social class or another. While
24 2, 11, 1 | Revolution harm themselves. A social authority that degrades
25 2, 11, 1 | Christian love among the social classes.~· Above
26 2, 11, 1 | a function that is also social), it is because this is
27 2, 11, 1 | construction of a proper social order but rather the struggle
28 2, 11, 1 | could not accept as licit a social organization in which all
29 3, 2, 3 | specific factor to lead each social group and even each man
30 3, 2, 3 | in religious, political, social, and economic convictions;
31 3, 2, 4 | through some newspaper or social movement, running after
32 Post | rationalist theory that all social inequalities must be eliminated,
33 Post | a seemingly new subject: social elites and the seasoned
34 Post | elites must reclaim the social values of the privileged
35 Post | To some, reviving the social values of the elites may
36 Post | humanism open to God and to the social common good.~
37 Post | opportune to recall the Church's social doctrine on the forms of
38 Post | Angelicum, whose School of Social Sciences he founded. In
39 Post | over the fields of history, social psychology, philosophy,
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