Chap., §
1 Int, 4 | independently make his or her decisions and life choices. ~In particular,
2 Int, 4 | capacity to clarify the daily decisions of individuals and entire
3 2, 32| categorical and infallible decisions about good and evil. To
4 2, 47| freedom to make his own decisions. The workings of typically
5 2, 48| reference points for moral decisions, because the finalities
6 2, 55| actions "judgments" but "decisions" : only by making these
7 2, 55| only by making these decisions "autonomously" would man
8 2, 60| the correspondence of its decisions with the commands and prohibitions
9 2, 61| good, and not in arbitrary "decisions". The maturity and responsibility
10 2, 61| alleged autonomy in personal decisions, but, on the contrary, by
11 2, 66| of acts of faith and of decisions which can be described as
12 2, 67| through conscious and free decisions. Precisely for this reason,
13 2, 67| his freedom in conscious decisions to the contrary, with regard
14 2, 67| in each of his deliberate decisions. In point of fact, the morality
15 2, 71| ourselves as we will, by our decisions".121 ~
16 3, 85| make judgments and lead to decisions in accordance with the truth,
17 3, 86| his errors and negative decisions, man glimpses the source
18 3, 88| in making judgments and decisions often appear extraneous
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