Verifying Proposals Through Natural Acceptance and Self-Inquiry

Verifying Proposals Based on Natural Acceptance

Natural acceptance refers to the inherent and unconditional willingness within every human being to accept certain truths or values when presented without external influence or preconditioning. It serves as an internal compass for distinguishing between what is truly conducive to human happiness and what is not. To verify a proposal on the basis of natural acceptance, we follow these steps:

  1. Present the proposal clearly.
  2. Reflect inwardly.
  3. Observe the inner
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Political Science Fundamentals: Sovereignty and State Theories

This material provides a breakdown of key concepts relevant to your studies, focusing on Sovereignty and the nature of the State.

I. Sovereignty: Supreme State Authority

1. Meaning of Sovereignty

Sovereignty is the supreme power or authority of a state. It signifies that within its defined territory, the state possesses the final authority in making laws and decisions, and it remains free from external control by other nations.

2. Main Characteristics of Sovereignty

  • Absoluteness: There is no power higher
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Descartes’ Fifth Meditation: Proving God’s Existence

Fifth Meditation, Section 4: Based on that, I can develop a demonstrative proof of the existence of God. I find in me the idea of God, and I know clearly and distinctly present and eternal existence in the same way that I know the idea of a triangle necessarily has three angles that add up to two right angles. Although none of the above findings were true, the truth of God’s existence would be akin to mathematical truths.

At first, I think the essence of the idea of a triangle and God do not prove

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Moral Concepts and Vocabulary in Ethics

Moral Concepts and Vocabulary

Reading 1: Distinguishing Claims

Descriptive Claims

  • Describe how the world is.
  • Involve no judgment.
  • Example: “The car is green.”

Normative Claims

  • Say how the world should be.
  • Make evaluations.
  • Example: “The car is bad.”

Moral or ethical claims are a type of normative claim. All moral claims are normative, but not all normative claims are moral.

Welfare and Value

Welfare, well-being, and prudential value: Benefits your own well-being.

Actions: Moral Status

  • Impermissible: Morally
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Augustine on Reason and Faith: Illumination, Memory, and Will

Reason and Faith

Reason and faith. Augustine lived with great intensity the problem of the relationship between reason and faith. In his youth, convinced by the alleged incompatibility between the two, he left the Church; when he returned to its bosom he insisted that the intellectual, in order to believe, must not abdicate his rational demands.

  1. There is only one truth about things, illuminated by two sources of light: reason and faith. Faith is the more powerful of the two, enabling the fullness
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Catholic Social Doctrine: Property, Labor, and Economy

19th-Century Social Context and the Church

The 19th-century social context led to the development of the Social Doctrine of the Church (SDC) and specific doctrinal responses to the economic systems of that era.

Social Consequences of Industrialization

The period was defined by harsh social outcomes resulting from the new industrial economic system:

  • Widespread Misery: The masses lived in a state of “utter poverty.”
  • Social Degeneration: Rapid industrial expansion, scientific discoveries, and a shift in
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