Conscience: The Self in Search of The Good
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Transcript Conscience: The Self in Search of The Good
Chapter 3
Chapter
1, something at our very core
seeks the good
Chapter 2, the human is a moral agent
Chapter 3, the importance of
• Others
• Having a direction in life
• Character & one’s body
• Conscience
• Developing one’s conscience
Am
I my brother’s keeper? (Gen. 4.9)
Are you responsible for your sister and
brother?
Western society doesn’t like “yes” as the
answer
• Freedom is seen as independence from
others.
Others
can become “my hell”
“I may choose to build bridges
but that is wholly my decision. I
don’t need others. I can be a full
human being and free without
them.”
We
are unique individuals
But, we don’t need to see others
as enemies of our autonomy
The other makes it possible for
us to be our true selves.
See pages 42-43 of text
An
unhealthy love of self (see page 43)
Knowing
who you are means
knowing where you stand
Everyone stands somewhere
You need to know your
commitments, where you stand
on the great issues
Charles Taylor, in
Sources of the Self,
shows how a human lives a sense of
direction
Our moral orientation forms part of our
identity
We are framed by our commitments (e.g.,
R.C.) and our particular identifications
(being Quebecois…)
Name
Statement
of relationship
Social role
• Position
• Career
Our fundamental stance framed in
terms of who we are
Our
stance in life shaped by a community
that shares a common language
There is no way we could be inducted into
personhood except by being initiated into
a language.
Language contains & shares common
experiences & commitments
Think of the “inside joke”
Incarnation
Trinity
Grace
Eucharist
Trinity
• God a union of three persons: Father, Son & Holy
Spirit
• Three distinct persons in ONE God
Hypostasis
and prosopon (Greek & Latin)
for “person”, referred to what one could see
from the outside
1. Person: an individual with rights &
responsibilities; a unique & autonomous
individual who is conscious & can act
2. A meaning out of the expression of the
persons of the Trinity united as one in God
Love pours itself out toward another
In God this breathing forth of love is a
communion of love that is Father, Son, and Spirit.
This love generated the Son and breathed forth
the Spirit so that there are three persons. At the
same time, this love binds the three into a unity.
Person: the outpouring of love toward the other
We are made in God’s image: i.e., by and for love
Humans are social beings.
Person essentially means “the self as
relationship”
“Do
you not know that your body is a temple
of the Holy Spirit within you, which you have
from God?” (1 Cor. 6.19)
“character” how your actions over time tend
to become fixed in your body.
(consider those who train for athletics
muscle memory/strength/endurance,
technique
Moral fibre is like muscle fibre: the more
you use it, the stronger your character
See page 49
Repeating
action becomes fixed
takes root in you others see this as one
of your character traits
Read excerpt from Full Disclosure by
William Safire on pages 49 & 50
What you believe & value, your habits,
your moral principles your choices
See excerpt from A Man for All Seasons p. 51
Conscience
• The place where we hold ourselves in our own hands
• A voice that calls us to “love and do what is good and
to avoid evil.”
• A law inscribed in human hearts by God
• Our most secret core and sanctuary where we are
alone with God whose voice echoes in depths
Make
own notes on “Conscience in the
teaching of the Church” p. 52
Conscience in contrast to Freud’s concept of
superego page 53 & 54
1.
Conscience is a capacity to recognize right &
wrong
1. A basic orientation to do good, an essential human trait
2. Sociopaths / psychopaths have no conscience
2.
Conscience is a process of moral reasoning
1. Requires learning facts, values, how to reason
2. A life-long process
3. Seek out guidance from others
3.
Conscience as judgment
1. Conscience is incomplete until acted upon
See Gula’s chart on page 55, copy into your notes
No
simple answer
Conscience develops
• As you mature
• As you take account of the norms & values of your
tradition
• As you deal with your failures, sins, weaknesses and
your need of support from others and God
• As you participate in prayer and sacrament
(Eucharist, Reconciliation)
• As you grow in the virtue of humility
RATIONALIZATION
TRIVIALIZATION
MISINFORMATION
THE
END JUSTIFIES THE IMMORAL
MEANS
MEANS TO AN END
DIFFICULT REASON
Copy
the diagram on page 58