Chap., §
1 Int, 4 | teaching regarding the many different spheres of human life. In
2 1, 13 | for its own sake".21 The different commandments of the Decalogue
3 1, 13 | at the level of the many different goods which characterize
4 1, 25 | practice in the various different cultures throughout the
5 1, 26 | they are to be lived in different cultural circumstances (
6 1, 27 | and correctly applied in different times and places. This constant "
7 2, 32 | faced with his own truth, different from the truth of others.
8 2, 32 | of human nature. ~These different notions are at the origin
9 2, 45 | always meant for man. The different ways in which God, acting
10 2, 46 | age is marked, though in a different sense, by a similar tension.
11 2, 53 | moral norms in the light of different cultural contexts, a formulation
12 2, 65 | freedom", deeper than and different from freedom of choice,
13 2, 67 | positive effort to fulfil the different obligations of the moral
14 2, 75 | approaches imported from different currents of thought — "consequentialism"
15 2, 75 | act would be judged in two different ways: its moral "goodness"
16 3, 104| failings. Here we encounter two different attitudes of the moral conscience
17 3, 112| way which is often quite different from that of empirical normality.
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