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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
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    By overcoming her negative feelings at the time she forgi... — Carmelics
    Home/Forgiveness & Mercy
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    Supports→We can plausibly say that the victim has forgiven her offender when she first overcomes her resentment towards him.

    By overcoming her negative feelings at the time she forgives, the victim does not necessarily eliminate these feelings without a trace; they may recur from time to time throughout her life.

    Forgiveness & Mercy
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    Topics

    Forgiveness & Mercy

    Key Terms

    Forgiveness(as used in ethics)
    The act of letting go of anger or resentment toward someone who has hurt you, and choosing not to hold their wrongdoing against them anymore.
    Negative feelings(as used in discussing emotional responses to harm)
    Emotions like anger, resentment, hurt, or bitterness that naturally arise when someone has been wronged.
    Overcoming (in philosophical context)(as used in philosophy of emotions and personal growth)
    Successfully managing or dealing with something difficult, often by changing how you relate to it rather than making it completely disappear.

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Recur(as used in discussing emotions and psychology)
    To happen again or come back after stopping for a while.

    Related

    Once she has determined that forgiveness is the appropriate attitude towards her...We can plausibly say that the victim has forgiven her offender when she first ov...

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    SEP: forgiveness
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    By overcoming her negative feelings at the time she forgives, the victim does not necessarily eliminate these feelings without a trace. They may recur from time to time throughout her life. However, once she has determined that forgiveness is the appropriate attitude towards her offender and has overcome her negative feelings towards him, it will presumably be possible for her to conquer these feelings again if they do recur. Thus we can plausibly say that the victim has forgiven her offender when she first overcomes her resentment towards him. (1993: 341–2)

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