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Commentary on Thomas Aquinas’s Virtue Ethics

✍ Scribed by J. Budziszewski


Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Year
2017
Tongue
English
Leaves
318
Category
Library

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✦ Table of Contents


Frontmatter
Analytical Contents
Acknowledgments
Ante Studium
Introduction
Part I Moral Character in General
I-II, Question 55, Article 4 - Whether Virtue Is Suitably Defined?
I-II, Question 58, Article 4 - Whether There Can Be Moral without Intellectual Virtue?
I-II, Question 58, Article 5 - Whether There Can Be Intellectual without Moral Virtue?
I-II, Question 61, Article 2 - Whether There Are Four Cardinal Virtues?
I-II, Question 61, Article 3 - Whether Any Other Virtues Should Be Called Principal Rather Than These?
I-II, Question 62, Article 1 - Whether There Are Any Theological Virtues?
I-II, Question 63, Article 1 - Whether Virtue Is in Us by Nature?
I-II, Question 63, Article 2 - Whether Any Virtue Is Caused in Us by Habituation?
I-II, Question 65, Article 1 - Whether the Moral Virtues Are Connected with One Another?
I-II, Question 84, Article 4 - Whether the Seven Capital Vices Are Suitably Reckoned?
Part II The Virtue of Justice, Especially in Relation to Law
II-II, Question 30, Article 3 - Whether Mercy Is a Virtue?
II-II, Question 58, Article 1 - Whether Justice Is Fittingly Defined as Being the Perpetual and Constant Will to Render to Each One His Right?
II-II, Question 60, Article 1 - Whether Judgment Is an Act of Justice?
II-II, Question 60, Article 2 - Whether It Is Lawful to Judge?
II-II, Question 60, Article 5 - Whether We Should Always Judge According to the Written Law?
II-II, Question 60, Article 6 - Whether Judgment Is Rendered Perverse by Being Usurped?
II-II, Question 80, Article 1 - Whether the Virtues Annexed to Justice Are Suitably Enumerated?
II-II, Question 122, Article 1 - Whether the Precepts of the Decalogue Are Precepts of Justice?
Index


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