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    Setting oneself against one's own firm judgment of consci... — Carmelics
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    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Supports→One's conscience is binding upon oneself even when one's conscience is utterly mistaken and directs awful misdeeds.

    Setting oneself against one's own firm judgment of conscience is setting oneself against the goods of truth and reasonableness.

    Moral ResponsibilityTruth & Knowledge
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    Moral ResponsibilityTruth & Knowledge

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    Conscience consists of judgments about the reasonableness or unreasonableness of...It is logically impossible for a person to be aware that their present judgment ...One's conscience is binding upon oneself even when one's conscience is utterly m...Setting oneself against the goods of truth and reasonableness cannot fail to be ...

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    Setting oneself against the goods of truth and reasonableness cannot f...84%One's conscience is binding upon oneself even when one's conscience is...83%If one has formed one's judgment of conscience corruptly, one acts wro...79%It is logically impossible for a person to be aware that their present...78%

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    AI-extracted
    SEP: aquinas-moral-political
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    Conscience in Aquinas’ view is not a special power or presence within us, but is our practical intelligence at work, primarily in the form of a stock of judgments about the reasonableness (rightness) or unreasonableness (wrongness) of kinds of action (kinds of option). Since each such judgment is of the form “[It is true that] action of the kind phi is always [or generally] wrong [or: is generally to be done, etc.]” or “phi is [always] [or: generally] required [or forbidden] by reason”, it must

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