Chap., §
1 1, 22 | capable of this love only by virtue of a gift received. As the
2 1, 26 | beginnings, the Apostles, by virtue of their pastoral responsibility
3 2, 35 | is good for man, and by virtue of his very love proposes
4 2, 36 | in setting down laws by virtue of a primordial and total
5 2, 40 | him: at the same time, by virtue of natural reason, which
6 2, 48 | reason and the support of virtue, discovers in the body the
7 2, 61 | do good and to cultivate virtue constantly. ~Consequently
8 2, 63 | rationally proposed to man in virtue of his end, or to make the
9 2, 68 | an individual could, by virtue of a fundamental option,
10 2, 68 | moral norms or rules. By virtue of a primordial option for
11 2, 73 | good and in conformity with virtue... The beauty of this image
12 2, 73 | conscious and deliberate, by virtue of which man is "responsible"
13 2, 76 | act contrary to faith or virtue. ~
14 2, 81 | act intrinsically evil by virtue of its object into an act "
15 3, 93 | she is sustained by the virtue of fortitude, whereby —
16 3, 100| requires the practice of the virtue of temperance, to moderate
17 3, 100| goods of this world; of the virtue of justice, to preserve
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