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| practical judgement of reason that helps a person decide the goodness or sinfulness of an action or attitude |
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1 - awareness of God's call to be 2 - awareness of God's call to know and do the good 3 - practical judgement of the intellect |
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| 6 things conscience is not |
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1 - conscience as a majority opinion 2 - conscience as a feeling 3 - conscience as a super-ego 4 - conscience as a gut instinct 5 - conscience as Gimeny-Cricket (internal voice) 6 - conscience as myth |
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| when conscience is at work |
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| always - before, during, and after the action |
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Study - gather info on moral object, motives, and circumstances Elect - determine if action is consistent with good examples Execute - carrying out decision Review - reflect on performed actions |
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| consciousness vs conscience |
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consciousness - awareness to one's surroundings and self conscience - deals with acts of judging based on knowledge of right and wrong |
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| lack of knowledge in person capable of possessing such knowledge |
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vincible - can be overcome but does not erase moral responsibility invincible - no way to overcome, not morally accountable |
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| force applied on a person by another that compels that person to perform an action against their will |
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| disturbance of and resulting from present or imminent danger |
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| rebellion of passions against reason; emotions over thought and reason |
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| when your conscience is formed properly |
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| you must follow it or it is a sin |
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| conscience is an operation of |
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| conscience is something we are rather than |
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| falsely indicates that evil is good and good is evil |
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| conscience without fear of error |
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| conscience that leaves a person undecided, uncertain |
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| conscience making judgments on insufficient grounds (may think grave sins are permissible) |
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| overzealous, when someone sees evil when there is none |
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| moral virtue that ensures firmness in the face of difficulty |
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| form and inform your conscience |
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object intention circumstances |
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| conscience allows us to be |
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| responsible for our actions |
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| Latin root word of conscience |
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| ultimate act of fortitude; willing to suffer and die for truth virtue |
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| sources to look for to inform conscience |
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| will use sources to help make decision, SEER method, prayer |
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| Tom Cruise, defending lawyer |
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| defendants, Marines who killed Santiago |
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| officer who assisted in defence |
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| leader of internal affairs, on defense team |
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| leader of Gitmo Marines who orders code red |
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| plantoon leader of infantry unit |
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| prosecutor representing USA |
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| officers disciplining their own soldiers |
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| sympathetic, supportive --> not guilty |
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| believes them, but should go to jail anyway, what they did was wrong despite orders |
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| concerned with only what he can prove |
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| immoral -> orders discipline, covers actions after death of Santiago |
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| has guilt, wanted Santiago transferred, kills himself so he doesn't have to testify, wants to help defense |
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| no respect for Navy, mean |
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murder conspiracy to commit murder conduct unbecoming a US Marine |
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| don't follow immoral orders |
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| why Capt. Ross was willing to plea bargain |
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| only way for defense to win |
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| Gessop admits to code red |
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