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    Some inclinations are naturally common yet unnatural beca... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→Explanatory priority in Aquinas' natural law theory must be accorded to the basic human goods themselves, not to the naturalness of inclinations.

    Some inclinations are naturally common yet unnatural because they lack any intelligibly good object.

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    Virtue Ethics

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    Truth & Knowledge2 linkedMoral Responsibility1 linked

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    An inclination is relevant in practical reason because its object is desirable, ...Explanatory priority in Aquinas' natural law theory must be accorded to the basi...Human actions are rightly called natural (in the morally relevant sense) when an...

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    Many modern accounts of Aquinas’ theory of natural law give explanatory primacy to the naturalness of the inclinations (to live, to know, etc.) that correspond to these basic goods. But others regard this as a fundamental misunderstanding of Aquinas’ conception of will, and of the epistemological relationship between nature and reason. Will is for him intelligent response to intelligible good: one’s will is “in” one’s reason [voluntas in ratione]. He makes it very explicit both that human action

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