Chapter, Paragraph
1 II,14 | and from the viewpoint of human rights, every human being
2 II,14 | viewpoint of human rights, every human being has the right to seek
3 II,14 | of social groups and any human power," in such a way that
4 II,14 | to these constraints on human freedom in general and on
5 II,14(44)| Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UNO), December 10,
6 II,15 | personnel. This is no mere human calculation; it is an attitude
7 III,22 | priests: "Instructors (of the human being and his life) in the
8 III,23 | for the transformation of human beings.~In the early Church,
9 III,24 | others, and to serve the human community in every way. ~
10 IV,29 | which is an assembly of human beings who are sinners and
11 IV,29 | that the history of the human race, marked as it is by
12 V,38 | possibility of uniting the human race-all this can provide
13 V,39 | and on the advancement of human dignity, on development,
14 VII,52 | personal history but into human history itself, becoming
15 VII,52 | that makes up the web of human life under the influence
16 VII,53 | the cultural heritage of a human group and use them to help
17 VII,55 | consequences of disregarding the human faculty of memory, should
18 VIII,58 | question of transmitting human knowledge, even of the highest
19 VIII,60 | emphasize that the fundamental human attitude is that of seeking
20 IX,63 | of worship to concern for human advancement and the defense
21 IX,63 | advancement and the defense of human rights. But let the concern
22 IX,69 | very clear right of the human person and of the family,
23 Conclu,73| truth," was formed by her in human knowledge of the Scriptures
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