Fernán Caballero

 Raimundo Diosdado Caballero

 Juan Caballero y Ocio

 Cabasa

 Jean Cabassut

 Miguel Cabello de Balboa

 Alvar Nuñez Cabeza de Vaca

 John & Sebastian Cabot

 Francisco Cabral

 Pedralvarez Cabral

 Estévan (Juan) Cabrillo

 Cadalous

 Caddo Indians

 Cades

 Antoine de Lamothe, Sieur de Cadillac

 Diocese of Cadiz

 St. Caedmon

 University of Caen

 Cæremoniale Episcoporum

 Caesarea

 Caesarea Mauretaniae

 Caesarea Palaestinae

 Caesarea Philippi

 St. Caesarius of Arles

 Caesarius of Heisterbach

 St. Caesarius of Nazianzus

 Caesarius of Prüm

 Caesar of Speyer

 Caesaropolis

 Archdiocese of Cagliari

 Diocese of Cagli e Pergola

 Charles Cahier

 Daniel William Cahill

 Diocese of Cahors

 Diocese of Caiazzo

 Armand-Benjamin Caillau

 Cain

 Cainites

 Joseph Caiphas

 Caius

 John Caius

 Popes Sts. Caius and Soter

 St. Cajetan

 Constantino Cajetan

 Tommaso de Vio Gaetani Cajetan

 Diocese of Calabozo

 Diocese of Calahorra and La Calzada

 Calama

 Fray Antonio de la Calancha

 Calas Case

 Mario di Calasio

 Pedro de Calatayud

 Military Order of Calatrava

 Archdiocese of Calcutta

 Polidoro (da Caravaggio) Caldara

 Domingos Caldas-Barbosa

 Pedro Calderon de la Barca

 Caleb

 Christian Calendar

 Jewish Calendar

 Reform of the Calendar

 Ambrogio Calepino

 Paolo Caliari

 California

 Vicariate Apostolic of Lower California

 California Missions

 Louis-Hector de Callières

 Callinicus

 Callipolis

 Pope Callistus I

 Pope Callistus II

 Pope Callistus III

 Jacques Callot

 Pierre Cally

 Dom Augustin Calmet

 Caloe

 Diocese of Caltagirone

 Diocese of Caltanisetta

 Calumny

 Dionysius Calvaert

 Congregation of Our Lady of Calvary

 Mount Calvary

 Calvert

 Diocese of Calvi and Teano

 John Calvin

 Calvinism

 Justus Baronius Calvinus

 Calynda

 Camachus

 Camaldolese

 Diego Muñoz Camargo

 Luca Cambiaso

 Archdiocese of Cambrai

 University of Cambridge

 Cambysopolis

 George Joseph Camel

 Diocese of Camerino

 Camerlengo

 St. Camillus de Lellis

 Camisards

 Luis Vaz de Camões

 Girolamo Campagna

 Domenico Campagnola

 Jeanne-Louise-Henriette Campan

 Pedro Campaña

 Tommaso Campanella

 Giuseppe Campani

 Diocese of Campeche

 Lorenzo Campeggio

 Bernardino Campi

 Galeazzo Campi

 Giulio Campi

 Campo Santo de' Tedeschi

 Jean-Pierre Camus de Pont-Carré

 Cana

 Canada

 José de la Canal

 Canary Islands

 Canatha

 Luis Cancer de Barbastro

 Candace

 Diocese of Candia

 Candidus

 Candlemas

 Candles

 Candlesticks

 Canea

 Vicariate Apostolic of Canelos and Macas

 Vincent Canes

 St. Canice

 Henricus Canisius

 Theodorich Canisius

 Alonso Cano

 Melchior Cano

 Canon

 Canon (2)

 Canoness

 Canon of the Mass

 Canon of the Holy Scriptures

 Apostolic Canons

 Collections of Ancient Canons

 Ecclesiastical Canons

 Canons and Canonesses Regular

 Canons Regular of the Immaculate Conception

 Canopus

 Canopy

 Canossa

 Antonio Canova

 Cantate Sunday

 Ancient Diocese of Canterbury

 Canticle

 Canticle of Canticles

 Cantor

 Cesare Cantù

 Canute

 St. Canute IV

 Diocese of Capaccio and Vallo

 Baptiste-Honoré-Raymond Capefigue

 Pietro Caperolo

 John Capgrave

 Diocese of Cap Haïtien

 Capharnaum

 Capitolias

 Capitularies

 Episcopal and Pontifical Capitulations

 Count Gino Capponi

 Domenico Capranica

 Giovanni Battista Caprara

 John Capreolus

 Capsa

 Captain (In the Bible)

 Captivities of the Israelites

 Archdiocese of Capua

 Capuchinesses

 Capuchin Friars Minor

 Capuciati

 Apostolic Prefecture of Caquetá

 José de Carabantes

 Caracalla

 Archdiocese of Caracas

 Vincent Caraffa

 Caraites

 Juan Caramuel y Lobkowitz

 Auguste Carayon

 James Joseph Carbery

 Carbonari

 Ignatius Carbonnelle

 Diocese of Carcassonne (Carcassum)

 Girolamo Cardan

 Juan Cardenas

 Cardica

 Cardinal

 Cardinal Protector

 Cardinal Vicar

 Cardinal Virtues

 Bartolommeo and Vincenzo Carducci

 Carem

 Mathew Carey

 Etienne de Carheil

 Diocese of Cariati (Paternum)

 Caribs

 Giacomo Carissimi

 Dionigi Carli da Piacenza

 Ancient Diocese of Carlisle

 Carlovingian Schools

 Carmel

 Mount Carmel

 Carmelite Order

 Melchior Carneiro

 Jean-Baptiste Carnoy

 Horacio Carochi

 Caroline Books (Libri Carolini)

 Caroline Islands

 Raymond Caron

 René-Edouard Caron

 Vittore Carpaccio

 Carpasia

 Diocese of Carpi

 Carracci

 Bartolomé Carranza

 Diego Carranza

 Juan Carreno de Miranda

 Rafael Carrera

 Carrhae

 Joseph Carrière

 Louis de Carrières

 Charles Carroll of Carrollton

 Daniel Carroll

 John Carroll

 Archdiocese of Cartagena

 Diocese of Cartagena

 St. Carthage

 Archdiocese of Carthage

 Carthusian Order

 Georges-Etienne Cartier

 Jacques Cartier

 Bernardino Lopez de Carvajal

 Gaspar de Carvajal

 Juan Carvajal (Carvagial)

 Luis de Carvajal

 Luisa de Carvajal

 Thomas Carve

 John Caryll

 Carystus

 Diocese of Casale Monferrato (Casalensis)

 Giovanni Battista Casali

 Vicariate Apostolic of Casanare

 Girolamo Casanata

 Bartolomé de las Casas

 Diocese of Caserta

 John Casey

 Henri Raymond Casgrain

 Cashel

 St. Casimir

 Casium

 Jean-Jacques Casot

 George Cassander

 Joseph Cassani

 Diocese of Cassano all' Ionio

 Patrick S. Casserly

 John Cassian

 William Cassidy

 Giovanni Domenico Cassini

 Cassiodorus

 François Dollier de Casson

 Diocese of Cassovia

 Castabala

 Andrea Castagno

 Diocese of Castellammare di Stabia

 Diocese of Castellaneta (Castania)

 Juan de Castellanos

 Benedetto Castelli

 Pietro Castelli

 Giovanni Battista Castello

 Baldassare Castiglione

 Count Carlo Ottavio Castiglione

 Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione

 Castile and Aragon

 Cristóbal de Castillejo

 Caspar Castner

 Castoria

 Francesco Castracane degli Antelminelli

 Alphonsus de Castro

 Fernando Castro Palao

 Guillen de Castro y Bellvis

 Casuistry

 Edward Caswall

 Roman Catacombs

 Catafalque

 Giuseppe Catalani

 Catalonia

 Archdiocese of Catania (Catanensis)

 Diocese of Catanzaro

 Catechumen

 Categorical Imperative

 Category

 Catenæ

 Cathari

 Cathedra

 Cathedral

 Cathedraticum

 Ven. Edmund Catherick

 Monastery of St. Catherine

 Catherine de' Medici

 St. Catherine de' Ricci

 St. Catherine of Alexandria

 St. Catherine of Bologna

 St. Catherine of Genoa

 St. Catherine of Siena

 St. Catherine of Sweden

 Catholic

 Catholic Benevolent Legion

 The Catholic Club of New York

 Catholic Epistle

 Catholic Knights of America

 Catholic Missionary Union

 Catholicos

 Catholic University of America

 François Catrou

 Diocese of Cattaro (Catharum)

 Augustin-Louis Cauchy

 Caughnawaga

 François-Etienne Caulet

 Caunus

 Cause

 Nicolas Caussin

 Diocese of Cava and Sarno

 Felice Cavagnis

 Bonaventura Cavalieri

 James Cavanagh

 Giovanni Antonio Cavazzi

 Celestino Cavedoni

 Andres Cavo

 William Caxton

 Diocese of Cayes

 Comte de Caylus

 Charles-Félix Cazeau

 St. Ceadda

 Diocese of Cebú

 St. Cecilia

 Cedar (1)

 Cedar (2)

 St. Cedd

 Cedes

 Brook of Cedron

 Diocese of Cefalù

 Rémi Ceillier

 Celebret

 Celenderis

 Pope St. Celestine I

 Pope Celestine II

 Pope Celestine III

 Pope Celestine IV

 Pope St. Celestine V

 Celibacy of the Clergy

 Cella

 Elizabeth Cellier

 Benvenuto Cellini

 Celsus the Platonist

 Conrad Celtes

 The Celtic Rite

 Cemetery

 Religious of the Cenacle

 Robert Cenalis

 Diocese of Ceneda

 Censer

 Censorship of Books

 Ecclesiastical Censures

 Theological Censures

 Census

 German Roman Catholic Central Verein of North America

 Centuriators of Magdeburg

 Centurion

 St. Ceolfrid

 Ceolwulf

 Francisco Cepeda

 Ceramus

 Cerasus

 Ceremonial

 Ceremony

 Cerinthus

 Certitude

 Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra

 Salazar Francisco Cervantes

 Diocese of Cervia

 Andrea Cesalpino

 Giuliano Cesarini

 Diocese of Cesena

 St. Ceslaus

 Cestra

 Ceylon

 Noel Chabanel

 Diocese of Chachapoyas

 James Chadwick

 Pierre Chaignon

 Chair of Peter

 Chalcedon

 Council of Chalcedon

 Chalcis

 Chaldean Christians

 Chalice

 Richard Challoner

 Diocese of Châlons-sur-Marne

 Cham, Chamites

 Archdiocese of Chambéry (Camberium)

 Samuel de Champlain

 Anthony Champney

 Jean-François Champollion

 Etienne Agard de Champs

 Chanaan, Chanaanites

 Diego Alvarez Chanca

 Chancel

 Bl. Pierre-Louis-Marie Chanel

 Vicariate Apostolic of Changanacherry

 Claude Chantelou

 Chantry

 Jean Chapeauville

 Chapel

 Placide-Louis Chapelle

 Chaplain

 Jean-Antoine Chaptal

 Chapter

 Chapter House

 Character

 Character (in Catholic Theology)

 Charadrus

 Jean-Baptiste Chardon

 Mathias Chardon

 Chariopolis

 Charismata

 Civil Law Concerning Charitable Bequests

 Charity and Charities

 Congregation of the Brothers of Charity

 Sisters of Charity

 Charlemagne

 St. Charles Borromeo

 Emperor Charles V

 Charles Martel

 Diocese of Charleston

 François-Xavier Charlevoix

 Diocese of Charlottetown

 François-Philippe Charpentier

 Pierre Charron

 Charterhouse

 Alain Chartier

 Diocese of Chartres

 La Grande Chartreuse

 Chartulary

 Georges Chastellain

 Pierre Chastellain

 Chastity

 Chasuble

 François-René de Chateaubriand

 Diocese of Chatham

 Geoffrey Chaucer

 Pierre-Joseph Chaumonot

 Maurice Chauncy

 Pierre-Joseph-Octave Chauveau

 Chelm and Belz

 Timoléon Cheminais de Montaigu

 Cherokee Indians

 Chersonesus

 Cherubim

 Maria Luigi Carlo Zenobio Salvatore Cherubini

 Ancient Diocese of Chester (Cestrensis)

 Jean-Louis Lefebvre de Cheverus

 Michel-Eugène Chevreul

 Diocese of Cheyenne

 Antoine-Léonard de Chézy

 Gabriello Chiabrera

 Diocese of Chiapas

 Diocese of Chiavari

 Chibchas

 Archdiocese of Chicago

 Henry Chichele

 Ancient Catholic Diocese of Chichester (Cicestrensis)

 Diocese of Chicoutimi

 Francesco Chieregati

 Archdiocese of Chieti

 Diocese of Chihuahua

 Diocese of Chilapa

 Children of Mary

 Children of Mary of the Sacred Heart

 Chile

 Domingo (San Anton y Muñon) Chimalpain

 China

 Chinooks

 Diocese of Chioggia (Chiozza)

 Chios

 Chippewa Indians

 Diocese of Chiusi-Pienza

 Chivalry

 Choctaw Indians

 Choir (1)

 Choir (2)

 Etienne-François, Duc de Choiseul

 Gilbert Choiseul du Plessis-Praslin

 Pierre Cholonec

 Alexandre-Etienne Choron

 Chrism

 Chrismal, Chrismatory

 Chrismarium

 Order of the Knights of Christ

 Diocese of Christchurch

 Christendom

 Christian

 Christian Archæology

 Christian Art

 Christian Brothers of Ireland

 Sisters of Christian Charity

 Confraternity of Christian Doctrine

 Brothers of Christian Instruction

 Christianity

 Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge

 Congregation of Christian Retreat

 Christina Alexandra

 Christine de Pisan

 Bl. Christine of Stommeln

 Christmas

 St. Christopher

 Pope Christopher

 St. Chrodegang

 St. Chromatius

 Chronicon Paschale

 Biblical Chronology

 General Chronology

 Sts. Chrysanthus and Daria

 St. Chrysogonus

 Chrysopolis

 Chur

 Church

 Churching of Women

 Church Maintenance

 Chusai

 Chytri

 Giovanni Giustino Ciampini

 Agostino Ciasca

 Ciborium

 Pierre-Martial Cibot

 Robert Ciboule

 Cibyra

 Andrea Ciccione

 Count Leopoldo Cicognara

 El Cid

 Cidyessus

 Diocese of Cienfuegos

 Carlo Cignani

 Cenni di Pepo Cimabue

 Giovanni Battista Cima da Conegliano

 Prefecture Apostolic of Cimbebasia (Upper)

 Archdiocese of Cincinnati

 Cincture

 Cinites

 Cinna

 Circesium

 Circumcision

 Feast of the Circumcision

 Cisalpine Club

 Cisamus

 Cistercian Sisters

 Cistercians

 Citation

 Abbey of Cîteaux

 Citharizum

 Diocese of Città della Pieve

 Diocese of Città di Castello

 Ciudad Real

 Diocese of Ciudad Rodrigo

 Cius

 Civil Allegiance

 Diocese of Cività Castellana, Orte, and Gallese

 Diocese of Civitavecchia and Corneto

 Abbey of Clairvaux

 Volume 5

 Clandestinity (in Canon Law)

 St. Clare of Assisi

 St. Clare of Montefalco

 Bl. Clare of Rimini

 William Clark

 Claudia

 Claudianus Mamertus

 Claudiopolis (1)

 Claudiopolis (2)

 Francisco Saverio Clavigero

 Christopher Clavius

 Claudius Clavus

 James Clayton

 Clazomenae

 Clean and Unclean

 Jan van Cleef

 Joost van Cleef

 Martin Van Cleef

 Mathieu-Nicolas Poillevillain de Clémanges

 Charles Clémencet

 Franz Jacob Clemens

 Clemens non Papa

 Pope St. Clement I

 Pope Clement II

 Pope Clement III

 Pope Clement IV

 Pope Clement V

 Pope Clement VI

 Pope Clement VII

 Pope Clement VIII

 Pope Clement IX

 Pope Clement X

 Pope Clement XI

 Pope Clement XII

 Pope Clement XIII

 Pope Clement XIV

 Cæsar Clement

 François Clément

 John Clement

 Clementines

 Bl. Clement Mary Hofbauer

 Clement of Alexandria

 St. Clement of Ireland

 Maurice Clenock

 Cleophas

 Clerestory

 Cleric

 Giovanni Clericato

 Clericis Laicos

 John Clerk

 Agnes Mary Clerke

 Clerks Regular

 Clerks Regular of Our Saviour

 Clerks Regular of the Mother of God of Lucca

 Diocese of Clermont

 Pope St. Cletus

 Diocese of Cleveland

 Josse Clichtove

 William Clifford

 Diocese of Clifton

 José Climent

 Ven. Margaret Clitherow

 Diocese of Clogher

 Cloister

 School of Clonard

 Diocese of Clonfert

 Abbey and School of Clonmacnoise

 St. Clotilda

 Clouet

 Councils of Clovesho

 Giorgio Clovio

 Clovis

 Diocese of Cloyne

 Congregation of Cluny

 John Clynn

 Bernabé Cobo

 Viatora Coccaleo

 Diocese of Cochabamba

 Martin of Cochem

 Diocese of Cochin

 Jacques-Denis Cochin

 Pierre-Suzanne-Augustin Cochin

 Johann Cochlæus

 Co-consecrators

 Cocussus

 Codex

 Codex Alexandrinus

 Codex Amiatinus

 Codex Bezae

 Codex Ephraemi Rescriptus

 Codex Sinaiticus

 Codex Vaticanus

 Thomas Codrington

 Co-education

 Nicolas Coeffeteau

 Coelchu

 Theodore Coelde

 St. Coemgen

 Coenred

 Coeur d'Alêne Indians

 Edward Coffin

 Robert Aston Coffin

 Cogitosus

 Diego López de Cogolludo

 Hermann Cohen

 Diocese of Coimbatore

 Diocese of Coimbra

 Jean-Baptiste Colbert

 Henry Cole

 Edward Coleman

 Henry James Coleridge

 John Colet

 Nicola Coleti

 St. Colette

 John Colgan

 Diocese of Colima

 Frédéric-Louis Colin

 Jean-Claude-Marie Colin

 Coliseum

 Diego Collado

 Collect

 Collectarium

 Collections

 Collectivism

 Diocese of Colle di Val d'Elsa

 College

 College (in Canon Law)

 Apostolic College

 Collège de France

 Collegiate

 St. Colman

 Walter Colman

 Joseph Ludwig Colmar

 Cologne

 University of Cologne

 Bl. Colomba of Rieti

 Republic of Colombia

 Archdiocese of Colombo

 Matteo Realdo Colombo

 Colonia (1)

 Colonna

 Egidio Colonna

 Giovanni Paolo Colonna

 Vittoria Colonna

 Colonnade

 Colophon

 Colorado

 Colossæ

 Epistle to the Colossians

 Liturgical Colours

 St. Columba of Terryglass

 St. Columba

 St. Columba, Abbot of Iona

 St. Columbanus

 Columbia University

 Christopher Columbus

 Diocese of Columbus

 Column

 Diocese of Comacchio

 Comana

 Diocese of Comayagua

 François Combefis

 Daniel Comboni

 St. Comgall

 Commandments of God

 Commandments of the Church

 Commemoration (in Liturgy)

 Commendatory Abbot

 Giovanni Francesco Commendone

 Commentaries on the Bible

 Philippe de Commines

 Commissariat of the Holy Land

 Commissary Apostolic

 Ecclesiastical Commissions

 Commodianus

 Commodus

 Brethren of the Common Life

 Philosophy of Common Sense

 Martyrs of the Paris Commune

 Communicatio Idiomatum

 Communion-Antiphon

 Communion-Bench

 Communion of Children

 The Communion of Saints

 Communion of the Sick

 Communion under Both Kinds

 Communism

 Diocese of Como

 Compagnie du Saint-Sacrement

 Compensation

 Occult Compensation

 Privilege of Competency

 Complin

 Compostela

 Compromise (in Canon Law)

 St. Conal

 St. Conan

 Conaty, Thomas James

 Concelebration

 Diocese of Concepción

 Conceptionists

 Industrial Conciliation

 Daniello Concina

 Conclave

 Concordances of the Bible

 Concordat

 The French Concordat of 1801

 Diocese of Concordia (Concordia Veneta)

 Diocese of Concordia (Corcondiensis in America)

 Concubinage

 Concupiscence

 Concursus

 Charles-Marie de la Condamine

 Etienne Bonnot de Condillac

 Condition

 Thomas Conecte

 Ecclesiastical Conferences

 Confession

 Confessor

 Confirmation

 Confiteor

 Confraternity (Sodality)

 Confucianism

 Congo Independent State and Congo Missions

 Congregatio de Auxiliis

 Congregationalism

 Congregational Singing

 Catholic Congresses

 Congrua

 Congruism

 Conimbricenses

 Giles de Coninck

 Connecticut

 John Connolly

 Pope Conon

 Conradin of Bornada

 Bl. Conrad of Ascoli

 Conrad of Hochstadt

 Conrad of Leonberg

 Conrad of Marburg

 Bl. Conrad of Offida

 St. Conrad of Piacenza

 Conrad of Saxony

 Conrad of Urach

 Conrad of Utrecht

 Florence Conry

 Ercole Consalvi

 Consanguinity (in Canon Law)

 Conscience

 Hendrik Conscience

 Consciousness

 Consecration

 Consent (in Canon Law)

 Consentius

 Conservator

 Papal Consistory

 Cuthbert Constable

 John Constable

 Constance

 Council of Constance

 Constantia

 Pope Constantine

 Diocese of Constantine (Cirta)

 Constantine Africanus

 Constantine the Great

 Constantinople

 Councils of Constantinople

 Rite of Constantinople

 Ecclesiastical Constitutions

 Papal Constitutions

 Consubstantiation

 Diocesan Consultors

 Philippe du Contant de la Molette

 Gasparo Contarini

 Giovanni Contarini

 Contemplation

 Contemplative Life

 Vincent Contenson

 Continence

 Contingent

 Contract

 The Social Contract

 Contrition

 Contumacy (in Canon Law)

 Adam Contzen

 Convent

 Convent Schools (Great Britain)

 Order of Friars Minor Conventuals

 Diocese of Conversano

 Conversi

 Conversion

 Convocation of the English Clergy

 Henry Conwell

 Archdiocese of Conza

 Vicariate Apostolic of Cooktown

 William Henry Coombes

 Copacavana

 Cope

 University of Copenhagen

 Nicolaus Copernicus

 François Edouard Joachim Coppée

 Coptos

 Claude-Godefroi Coquart

 Coracesium

 Ambrose Corbie

 Monastery of Corbie

 St. Corbinian

 James Andrew Corcoran

 Michael Corcoran

 Confraternities of the Cord

 Giulio Cesare Cordara

 Charles Cordell

 Balthasar Cordier

 Diocese of Cordova (Cordubensis)

 Diocese of Cordova (Cordubensis in America)

 Juan de Cordova

 Core, Dathan, and Abiron

 Vicariate Apostolic of Corea

 Archdiocese of Corfu

 Diocese of Coria

 Corinth

 Epistles to the Corinthians

 Gaspard-Gustave de Coriolis

 Diocese of Cork

 School of Cork

 Maurus Corker

 Cormac MacCuilenan

 Elena Lucrezia Piscopia Cornaro

 Jean-Baptiste Corneille

 Michel Corneille (the Younger)

 Michel Corneille (the Elder)

 Pierre Corneille

 Jacob Cornelisz

 Cornelius

 Pope Cornelius

 Peter Cornelius

 Cornelius Cornelii a Lapide

 Karl Josef Rudolph Cornely

 Nicolas Cornet

 Cornice

 Abbey of Cornillon

 Giovanni Maria Cornoldi

 Francisco Vasquez de Coronado

 Coronation

 Gregorio Nuñez Coronel

 Juan Coronel

 Corporal

 Corporation

 Corporation Act of 1661

 Feast of Corpus Christi

 Corpus Juris Canonici

 Fraternal Correction

 Correctories

 Michael Augustine Corrigan

 Sir Dominic Corrigan

 Corsica

 Hernando Cortés

 Giovanni Andrea Cortese

 Diocese of Cortona

 Abbey of Corvey

 Corycus

 Corydallus

 Juan de la Cosa

 Archdiocese of Cosenza

 Henry Cosgrove

 Edmund Cosin

 Cosmas

 Sts. Cosmas and Damian

 Cosmas Indicopleustes

 Cosmas of Prague

 Cosmati Mosaic

 Cosmogony

 Cosmology

 Francesco Cossa

 Lorenzo Costa

 Giovanni Domenico Costadoni

 Republic of Costa Rica

 Francis Coster

 Clerical Costume

 Maria Cosway

 Jean-Baptiste Cotelier

 Cotenna

 Cotiæum

 Pierre Coton

 Diocese of Cotrone

 Robert de Coucy

 Frederic René Coudert

 General Councils

 Evangelical Counsels

 Counterpoint

 The Counter-Reformation

 Court (in Scripture)

 William Courtenay

 Ecclesiastical Courts

 Jean Cousin

 Charles-Edmond-Henride Coussemaker

 Pierre Coustant

 Nicolas Coustou

 Diocese of Coutances

 Louis-Charles Couturier

 Diego Covarruvias

 Covenanters

 Covetousness

 Diocese of Covington

 Cowl

 Michiel Coxcie

 Michiel Coxcie

 Charles-Antoine Coysevox

 Lorenzo Cozza

 Giuseppe Cozza-Luzi

 Cracow

 Pearl Mary Teresa Craigie

 Richard Crashaw

 Jean Crasset

 Mrs. Augustus Craven

 Gaspar de Crayer

 Richard Creagh

 Creation

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Conscience



I. THE NAME

In English we have done with a Latin word what neither the Latins nor the French have done: we have doubled the term, making "conscience" stand for the moral department and leaving "consciousness" for the universal field of objects about which we become aware. In Cicero we have to depend upon the context for the specific limitation to the ethical area, as in the sentence: "mea mihi conscientia pluris est quam omnium sermo" (Att., XII, xxviii, 2). Sir W. Hamilton has discussed how far we can be said to be conscious of the outer objects which we know, and how far "consciousness" ought to be held a term restricted to states of self or self-consciousness. (See Thiele, Die Philosophie des Selbstbewusstseins, Berlin, 1895.) In the two words Bewusstsein and Gewissen the Germans have made a serviceable distinction answering to our "consciousness" and "conscience". The ancients mostly neglected such a discrimination. The Greeks often used phronesis where we should use "conscience", but the two terms are far from coincident. They also used suneidesis, which occurs repeatedly for the purpose in hand both in the Old and the New Testament. The Hebrews had no formal psychology, though Delitzsch has endeavoured to find one in Scripture. There the heart often stands for conscience.


II. ORIGIN OF CONSCIENCE IN THE RACE AND IN THE INDIVIDUAL

Of anthropologists some do and some do not accept the Biblical account of man's origin; and the former class, admitting that Adam's descendants might soon have lost the traces of their higher descent, are willing to hear, with no pledge of endorsing, what the latter class have to say on the assumption of the human development even from an animal ancestry, and on the further assumption that in the use of evidences they may neglect sequence of time and place. It is not maintained by any serious student that the Darwinian pedigree is certainly accurate: it has the value of a diagram giving some notion of the lines along which forces are supposed to have acted. Not, then, as accepting for fact, but as using it for a very limited purpose, we may give a characteristic sketch of ethical development as suggested in the last chapter of Dr. L. T. Hobhouse's "Morals in Evolution". It is a conjectural story, very like what other anthropologists offer for what it is worth and not for fully certified science.

Ethics is conduct or regulated life; and regulation has a crude beginning in the lowest animal life as a response to stimulus, as reflex action, as useful adaptation to environment. Thus the amoeba doubles itself round its food in the water and lives; it propagates by self-division. At another stage in the animal series we find blind impulses for the benefit of life and its propagation taking a more complex shape, until something like instinctive purpose is displayed. Useful actions are performed, not apparently pleasurable in themselves, yet with good in the sequel which cannot have been foreseen. The care of the animal for its young, the provision for the need of its future offspring is a kind of foreshadowed sense of duty. St. Thomas is bold to follow the terminology of Roman lawyers, and to assert a sort of morality in the pairing and the propagating of the higher animals: "ius naturale est quod natura omnia animalia docuit". (It is the natural law which nature has taught all animals.--"In IV Sent.", dist. xxxiii, a. 1, art. 4.) Customs are formed under the pressures and the interactions of actual living. they are fixed by heredity, and they await the analysis and the improvements of nascent reason. With the advent of man, in his rudest state--however he came to be in that state, whether by ascent or descent--there dawns a conscience, which, in the development theory, will have to pass through many stages. At first its categories of right and wrong are in a very fluid condition, keeping no fixed form, and easily intermixing, as in the chaos of a child's dreams, fancies, illusions, and fictions. The requirements of social life, which becomes the great moralizer of social action, are continually changing, and with them ethics varies its adaptations. As society advances, its ethics improves. "The lines on which custom is formed are determined in each society by the pressures, the thousand interactions of those forces of individual character and social relationship, which never cease remoulding until they have made men's loves and hates, their hopes and fears for themselves and their children, their dread of unseen agencies, their jealousies, their resentments, their antipathies, their sociability and dim sense of mutual dependence all their qualities good and bad, selfish and sympathetic, social and anti-social." (Op. cit., Vol. II, p. 262.) The grasp of experience widens and power of analysis increases, till, in a people like the Greeks, we come upon thinkers who can distinctly reflect on human conduct, and can put in practice the gnothi seauton (know thyself), so that henceforth the method of ethics is secured for all times, with indefinite scope left for its better and better application. "Here we have reached the level of philosophical or spiritual religions, systems which seek to concentrate all experience in one focus, and to illuminate all morality from one centre, thought, as ever, becoming more comprehensive as it becomes more explicit". (ibid., p. 266.)

What is said of the race is applied to the individual, as in him customary rules acquire ethical character by the recognition of distinct principles and ideals, all tending to a final unity or goal, which for the mere evolutionist is left very indeterminate, but for the Christian has adequate definition in a perfect possession of God by knowledge and love, without the contingency of further lapses from duty. To come to the fullness of knowledge possible in this world is for the individual a process of growth. The brain at first has not the organization which would enable it to be the instrument of rational thought: probably it is a necessity of our mind's nature that we should not start with the fully formed brain but that the first elements of knowledge should be gathered with the gradations of the developing structure. In the morally good family the child slowly learns right conduct by imitation, by instruction, by sanction in the way of rewards and punishments. Bain exaggerates the predominance of the last named element as the source whence the sense of obligation comes, and therein he is like Shaftesbury (Inquiry, II, n. 1), who sees in conscience only the reprover. This view is favoured also by Carlyle in his "Essay on Characteristics", and by Dr. Mackenzie in his "Manual of Ethics" (3rd ed., III, 14), where we read: "I should prefer to say simply that conscience is a feeling of pain accompanying and resulting from our non-conformity to principle." Newman also has put the stress on the reproving office of conscience. Carlyle says we should not observe that we had a conscience if we had never offended. Green thinks that ethical theory is mostly of negative use for conduct. (Prolegomena to Ethics, IV, 1.) It is better to keep in view both sides of the truth and say that the mind ethically developed comes to a sense of satisfaction in right doing and of dissatisfaction in wrongdoing, and that the rewards and the punishments judiciously assigned to the young have for their purpose, as Aristotle puts it, to teach the teachable how to find pleasure in what ought to please and displeasure in what ought to displease. The immature mind must be given external sanctions before it can reach the inward. Its earliest glimmering of duty cannot be clear light: it begins by distinguishing conduct as nice or as nasty and naughty: as approved or disapproved by parents and teachers, behind whom in a dim way stands the oft-mentioned God, conceived, not only in an anthropomorphic, but in a nepiomorphic way, not correct yet more correct than Caliban's speculations about Setebos. The perception of sin in the genuine sense is gradually formed until the age which we roughly designate as the seventh year, and henceforth the agent enters upon the awful career of responsibility according to the dictates of conscience. On grounds not ethical but scholastically theological, St. Thomas explains a theory that the unbaptized person at the dawn of reason goes through a first crisis in moral discrimination which turns simply on the acceptance or rejection of God, and entails mortal sin in case of failure. (I-II:89:6)


III. WHAT CONSCIENCE IS IN THE SOUL OF MAN?

It is often a good maxim not to mind for a time how a thing came to be, but to see what it actually is. To do so in regard to conscience before we take up the history of philosophy in its regard is wise policy, for it will give us some clear doctrine upon which to lay hold, while we travel through a region perplexed by much confusion of thought. The following points are cardinal:


  • The natural conscience is no distinct faculty, but the one intellect of a man inasmuch as it considers right and wrong in conduct, aided meanwhile by a good will, by the use of the emotions, by the practical experience of living, and by all external helps that are to the purpose.
  • The natural conscience of the Christian is known by him to act not alone, but under the enlightenment and the impulse derived from revelation and grace in a strictly supernatural order.
  • As to the order of nature, which does not exist but which might have existed, St. Thomas (I-II:109:3) teaches that both for the knowledge of God and for the knowledge of moral duty, men such as we are would require some assistance from God to make their knowledge sufficiently extensive, clear, constant, effective, and relatively adequate; and especially to put it within reach of those who are much engrossed with the cares of material life. It would be absurd to suppose that in the order of nature God could be debarred from any revelation of Himself, and would leave Himself to be searched for quite irresponsively.
  • Being a practical thing, conscience depends in large measure for its correctness upon the good use of it and on proper care taken to heed its deliverances, cultivate its powers, and frustrate its enemies.
  • Even where due diligence is employed conscience will err sometimes, but its inculpable mistakes will be admitted by God to be not blameworthy. These are so many principles needed to steady us as we tread some of the ways of ethical history, where pitfalls are many.


IV. THE PHILOSOPHY OF CONSCIENCE CONSIDERED HISTORICALLY


(1) In pre-Christian times

The earliest written testimonies that we can consult tell us of recognized principles in morals, and if we confine our attention to the good which we find and neglect for the present the inconstancy and the admixture of many evils, we shall experience a satisfaction in the history. The Persians stood for virtue against vice in their support of Ahura Mazda against Ahriman; and it was an excellence of theirs to rise above "independent ethics" to the conception of God as the rewarder and the punisher. They even touched the doctrine of Christ's saying, "What doth it profit a man if he gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?" when to the question, what is the worth of the whole creation displayed before us, the Zend-Avesta has the reply: "the man therein who is delivered from evil in thought, word, and deed: he is the most valuable object on earth." Here conscience was clearly enlightened. Of the moral virtues among the Persians truthfulness was conspicuous. Herodotus says that the youth were taught "to ride and shoot with the bow", and "to speak the truth". The unveracious Greeks, who admired the wiles of an Odysseus, were surprised at Persian veracity (Herodotus, I, 136, 138); and it may be that Herodotus is not fair on this head to Darius (III, 72). The Hindus in the Vedas do not rise high, but in Brahminism there is something more spiritual, and still more in the Buddhist reform on its best side, considered apart from the pessimistic view of life upon which its false asceticism was grounded. Buddhism had ten prohibitive commandments: three concerning the body, forbidding murder, theft, and unchastity; four concerning speech, forbidding lying, slander, abusive language, and vain conversation; and three concerning the mind internally, covetousness, malicious thoughts, and the doubting spirit. The Egyptians show the workings of conscience. In the "Book of the Dead" we find an examination of conscience, or rather profession of innocence, before the Supreme Judge after death. Two confessions are given enunciating most of the virtues (chap. cxxv): reverence for God; duties to the dead; charity to neighbours; duties of superiors and subjects; care for human life and limb; chastity, honesty, truthfulness, and avoidance of slander; freedom from covetousness. The Assyro-Babylonian monuments offer us many items on the favourable side; nor could the people whence issued the Code of Hammurabi, at a date anterior to the Mosaic legislation by perhaps seven hundred years, be ethically undeveloped. If the Code of Hammurabi has no precepts of reverence to God corresponding with the first three Commandments of the Mosaic Law, at least its preface contains a recognition of God's supremacy. In China Confucius (c. 500 B. C.), in connection with an idea of heaven, delivered a high morality; and Mencius (c. 300 B. C.) developed this code of uprightness and benevolence as "Heaven's appointment". Greek ethics began to pass from its gnomic condition when Socrates fixed attention on the gnothi seauton in the interests of moral reflection. Soon followed Aristotle, who put the science on a lasting basis, with the great drawback of neglecting the theistic side and consequently the full doctrine of obligation. Neither for "obligation" nor for "conscience" had the Greeks a fixed term. Still the pleasures of a good conscience and the pains of an evil one were well set forth in the fragments collected by Stobaeus peri tou suneidotos. Penandros, asked what was true freedom, answered: "a good conscience" (Gaisford's Stobaeus, vol. I, p. 429).


(2) In the Christian Fathers

The patristic treatment of ethics joined together Holy Scripture and the classical authors of paganism; no system was reached, but each Father did what was characteristic. Tertullian was a lawyer and spoke in legal terms: especially his Montanism urged him to inquire which were the mortal sins, and thus he started for future investigators a good line of inquiry. Clement of Alexandria was allegoric and mystic: a combiner of Orientalism, Hellenism, Judaism, and Christianity in their bearing on the several virtues and vices. The apologists, in defending the Christian character, dwelt on the marks of ethical conduct. St. Justin attributed this excellence to the Divine Logos, and thought that to Him, through Moses, the pagan philosophers were indebted (Apol., I, xliv). Similarly Origen accounted for pre-Christian examples of Christian virtue. As a Roman skilled in legal administration St. Ambrose was largely guided by Latin versions of Greek ethics, as is very well illustrated by his imitation in style of Cicero's "De Officiis", which he made the title of his own work. He discusses honestum et utile (I, ix); decorum, or to prepon as exhibited in Holy Scripture (x); various degrees of goodness, mediocre and perfect, in connection with the text, "if thou wilt be perfect" (xi); the passions of hot youth (xvii). Subsequent chapters dwell on the various virtues, as fortitude in war and its allied quality, courage in martyrdom (xl, xli). The second book opens with a discussion of beatitude, and then returns to the different virtues. It is the pupil of St. Ambrose, St. Augustine, who is, perhaps, the most important of the Fathers in the development of the Christian doctrine of conscience, not so much on account of his frequent discourses about moral subjects, as because of the Platonism which he drank in before his conversion, and afterwards got rid of only by degrees. The abiding result to the Scholastic system was that many writers traced their ethics and theology more or less to innate ideas, or innate dispositions, or Divine illuminations, after the example of St. Augustine. Even in St. Thomas, who was so distinctly an Aristotelean empiricist, some fancy that they detect occasional remnants of Augustinianism on its Platonic side.

Before leaving the Fathers we may mention St. Basil as one who illustrates a theorizing attitude. He was sound enough in recognizing sin to be graver and less grave; yet in the stress of argument against some persons who seemed to admit only the worst offenses against God to be real sins, he ventured without approving of Stoic doctrine, to point out a sort of equality in all sin, so far as all sin is a disobedience to God (Hom. de Justitia Dei, v-viii). Later Abelard and recently Dr. Schell abused this suggestion. But it has had no influence in any way like that of St. Augustine's Platonism, of which a specimen may be seen in St. Bonaventure, when he is treating precisely of conscience, in a passage very useful as shedding light on a subsequent part of this article. Some habits, he says, are acquired, some innate as regards knowledge of singulars and knowledge of universals. "Quum enim ad cognitionem duo concurrant necessario, videlicet praesentia cognoscibilis et lumen quo mediante de illo judicamus, habitus cognoscitivi sunt quodammodo nobis innati ratione luminis animo inditi; sunt etiam acquisiti ratione speciei"--"For as two things necessarily concur for cognition, namely, the presence of something cognoscible, and the light by which we judge concerning it, cognoscitive habits are in a certain sense innate, by reason of the light wherewith the mind is endowed; and they are also acquired, by reason of the species." ("Comment. in II Lib. Sent.", dist. xxxix, art. 1, Q. ii. Cf. St. Thomas, "De Veritate", Q. xi, art. 1: "Principia dicuntur innata quae statim lumine intellectus agentis cognoscuntur per species a sensibus abstractas".--Principles are called innate when they are known at once by the light of the active intellect through the species abstracted from the senses.) Then comes the very noticeable and easily misunderstood addition a little later: "si quae sunt cognoscibilia per sui essentiam, non per speciem, respectu talium poterit dici conscientia esse habitus simpliciter innatus, utpote respectu upote respectu hujus quod est Deum amare et timere; Deus enim non cognoscitur per similitudinem a sensu, immo `Dei notitia naturaliter est nobis inserta', sicut dicit Augustinus"--"if there are some things cognoscible through their very essence and not through the species, conscience, with regard to such things, may be called a habit simply innate, as, for example, with regard to loving and serving God; for God is not known by sense through an image; rather, 'the knowledge of God is implanted in us by nature', as Augustine says" ("In Joan.", Tract. cvi, n. 4; "Confess.", X, xx, xxix; "De Lib. Arbitr.", I, xiv, xxxi; "De Mor. Eccl.", iii, iv; "De Trin.", XIII, iii, vi; "Joan. Dam. de Fide", I, i, iii). We must remember that St. Bonaventure is not only a theologian but also a mystic, supposing in man oculus carnis, oculus rationis and oculus contemplationis (the eye of the flesh, the eye of reason, and the eye of contemplation); and that he so seriously regards man's power to prove by arguments the existence of God as to devote his labour to explaining that logical conviction is consistent with faith in the same existence (Comm. in III Sent., dist. xxiv, art. 1, Q. iv). All these matters are highly significant for those who take up any thorough examination of the question as to what the Scholastics thought about man having a conscience by his very nature as a rational being. The point recurs frequently in Scholastic literature, to which we must next turn.


In Scholastic times

It will help to make intelligible the subtle and variable theories which follow, if it be premised that the Scholastics are apt to puzzle readers by mixing up with their philosophy of reason a real or apparent apriorism, which is called Augustinianism, Platonism, or Mysticism.


  • As a rule, to which Durandus with some others was an exception, the Schoolmen regarded created causes as unable to issue in any definite act unless applied or stimulated by God, the Prime Mover: whence came the Thomistic doctrine of proemotio physica even for the intellect and the will, and the simple concursus of the non-Thomists.
  • Furthermore they supposed some powers to be potential and passive, that is, to need a creative determinant received into them as their complement: of which kind a prominent example was the intellectus possibilis informed by the species intelligibilis, and another instance was in relation to conscience, the synteresis. (St. Thomas, De Verit., Q. xvi, art. 1, ad 13.)
  • First principles or habits inherent in intellect and will were clearly traced by St. Thomas to an origin in experience and abstraction; but others spoke more ambiguously or even contradictorily; St. Thomas himself, in isolated passages, might seem to afford material for the priorist to utilize in favour of innate forms. But the Thomistic explanation of appetitus innatus, as contrasted with elicitus, saves the situation.

Abelard, in his "Ethics", or "Nosce Teipsum", does not plunge us into these depths, and yet he taught such an indwelling of the Holy Ghost in virtuous pagans as too unrestrictedly to make their virtues to be Christian. He placed morality so much in the inward act that he denied the morality of the outward, and sin he placed not in the objectively disordered deed but in contempt for God, in which opinion he was imitated by Prof. Schell. Moreover he opened a way to wrong opinions by calling free will "the free judgment about the will". In his errors, however, he was not so wholly astray as careless reading might lead some to infer. It was with Alexander of Hales that discussions which some will regard as the tedious minutiae of Scholastic speculation began. The origin lay in the introduction from St. Jerome (in Ezech., I, Bk. I, ch. 1) of the term synteresis or synderesis. There the commentator, having treated three of the mystic animals in the Prophecy as symbolizing respectively three Platonic powers of the soul -- to epithumetikon (the appetitive), to thumikon (the irascible), and to logikon (the rational) -- uses the fourth animal, the eagle, to represent what he calls sunteresis. The last, according to the texts employed by him to describe it, is a supernatural knowledge: it is the Spirit Who groans in man (Rom., viii, 26), the Spirit who alone knows what is in man (I Cor., ii, 11), the Spirit who with the body and the soul forms the Pauline trichotomy of I Thess., v, 23. Alexander of Hales neglects this limitation to the supernatural, and takes synteresis as neither a potentia alone, nor a habitus alone but a potentia habitualis, something native, essential, indestructible in the soul, yet liable to be obscured and baffled. It resides both in the intelligence and in the will: it is identified with conscience, not indeed on its lower side, as it is deliberative and makes concrete applications, but on its higher side as it is wholly general in principle, intuitive, a lumen innatum in the intellect and a native inclination to good in the will, voluntas naturalis non deliberativa (Summa Theologica I-II:71 to I-II:77). St. Bonaventure, the pupil, follows on the same lines in his "Commentarium in II Sent." (dist. xxxix), with the difference that he locates the synteresis as calor et pondus in the will only distinguishing it from the conscience in the practical intellect, which he calls an innate habit--"rationale iudicatorium, habitus cognoscitivus moralium principiorum"-- "a rational judgment, a habit cognoscitive of moral principles". Unlike Alexander he retains the name conscience for descent to particulars: "conscientia non solum consistit in universali sed etiam descendit ad particularia deliberativa" --"conscience not only consists in the universal but also descends to deliberative particulars". As regards general principles in the conscience, the habits are innate: while as regards particular applications, they are acquired (II Sent., dist xxxix, art. 1, Q; ii).

As forming a transition from the Franciscan to the Dominican School we may take one whom the Servite Order can at least claim as a great patron, though he seems not to have joined their body, Henry of Ghent. He places conscience in the intellect, not in the affective part--"non ad affectivam pertinet"--by which the Scholastics meant generally the will without special reference to feeling or emotion as distinguished in the modern sense from will. While Nicholas of Cusa described the Divine illumination as acting in blind-born man (virtus illuminati coecinati qui per fidem visum acquirit), Henry of Ghent required only assistances to human sight. Therefore he supposed:


  • an influentia generalis Dei to apprehend concrete objects and to generalize thence ideas and principles;
  • a light of faith;
  • a lumen speciale wherewith was known the sincera et limpida veritas rerum by chosen men only, who saw things in their Divine exemplars but not God Himself;
  • the lumen gloriæ to see God.

For our purpose we specially note this: "conscientia ad partem animae cognitivam non pertinet, sed ad affectivam"--"conscience belongs not to the cognitive part of the mind, but to the affective" (Quodlibet., I, xviii). St. Thomas, leading the Dominicans, places synteresis not in the will but in the intellect, and he applies the term conscience to the concrete determinations of the general principle which the synteresis furnishes: "By conscience the knowledge given through synteresis is applied to particular actions". ("De Verit.", Q. xvii, a. 2.; Cf. Summa Theologica, Q. lxxix, a. 13; "III Sent.", dist. xiv, a. 1, Q. ii; "Contra Gent.", II, 59.) Albertus agrees with St. Thomas in assigning to the intellect the synteresis, which he unfortunately derives from syn and hoerere (haerens in aliquo) (Summa Theol., Pt. II, Q. xcix, memb. 2, 3; Summa de Creaturis, Pt. II, Q. lxix, a. 1). Yet he does not deny all place to the will: "Est rationis practicae . . . non sine voluntate naturali, sed nihil est voluntatis deliberativae (Summa Theol., Pt. II, Q. xcix, memb. 1). The preference of the Franciscan School for the prominence of will, and the preference of the Thomistic School for the prominence of intellect is characteristic. (See Scotus, IV Sent., dist. xlix, Q. iv.) Often this preference is less significant than it seems. Fouillée, the great defender of the idée force-- idea as the active principle--allows in a controversy with Spencer that feeling and will may be involved in the idea. Having shown how Scholasticism began its research into conscience as a fixed terminology, we must leave the matter there, adding only three heads under which occasion was given for serious errors outside the Catholic tradition:


  • While St. Augustine did excellent service in developing the doctrine of grace, he never so clearly defined the exact character of the supernatural as to approach the precision which was given through the condemnation of propositions taught by Baius and Jansenius; and in consequence his doctrine of original sin remained unsatisfactory. When Alexander of Hales, without distinction of natural and supernatural, introduced among the Scholastics the words of St. Jerome about synteresis as scintilla conscientia, and called it lumen innatum, he helped to perpetuate the Augustinian obscurity.
  • As regards the intellect, several Scholastics inclined to the Arabian doctrine of intellectus agens, or to the Aristotelean doctrine of the Divine nous higher than the human soul and not perishable with it. Roger Bacon called the intellectus agens a distinct substance. Allied with this went Exemplarism, or the doctrine of archetypic ideas and the supposed knowledge of things in these Divine ideas. [Compare the prolepseis emphutoi of the Stoics, which were universals, koinai ennoiai]. Henry of Ghent distinguished in man a double knowledge: "primum exemplar rei est species eius universalis causata a re: secundum est ars divina, continens rerum ideales rationes" --"the first exemplar of a thing is universal species of it caused by the thing: the second is the Divine Art containing the ideal reasons (rationes) of things" (Theol., I, 2, n. 15). Of the former he says: "per tale exemplar acquisitum certa et infallibilis notitia veritatis est omnino impossibilis"--"through such an acquired exemplar, certain and infallible knowledge of truth is utterly impossible" (n. 17); and of the latter: "illi soli certam veritatem valent agnoscere qui earn in exemplari (aeterno) valent aspicere, quod non omnes valent"--"they alone can know certain truth who can behold it in the (eternal) exemplar, which not all can do" (I, 1, n. 21;). The perplexity was further increased when some, with Occam, asserted a confused intuition of things singular as opposed to the clearer idea got by the process of abstraction: "Cognitio singularis abstractiva praesupponit intuitivam ejusdem objecti"--"abstractive cognition of a singular presupposes intuitive cognition of the same object" (Quodlib., I, Q. xiii). Scotus also has taught the confused intuition of the singulars. Here was much occasion for perplexity on the intellectual side, about the knowledge of general principles in ethics and their application when the priority of the general to the particular was in question.
  • The will also was a source of obscurity. Descartes supposed the free will of God to have determined what for conscience was to be right and what wrong, and he placed the act of volition in an affirmation of the judgment. Scotus did not go thus far, but some Scotists exaggerated the determining power of Divine will, especially so as to leave it to the choice of God indefinitely to enlarge a creature's natural faculties in a way that made it hard to distinguish the natural from the supernatural. Connected with the philosophy of the will in matters of conscience is another statement open to controversy, namely, that the will can tend to any good object in particular only by reason of its universal tendency to the good. This is what Alexander of Hales means by synteresis as it exists in the will, when he says that it is not an inactive habit but a habit in some sense active of itself, or a general tendency, disposition, bias, weight, or virtuality. With this we might contrast Kant's pure noumenal will, good apart from all determinedly good objects.


Anti-Scholastic Schools

The history of ethics outside the Scholastic domain, so far as it is antagonistic, has its extremes in Monism or Pantheism on the one side and in Materialism on the other.

Spinoza

Spinoza is a type of the Pantheistic opposition. His views are erroneous inasmuch as they regard all things in the light of a fated necessity, with no free will in either God or man; no preventable evil in the natural course of things; no purposed good of creation; no individual destiny or immortality for the responsible agent: indeed no strict responsibility and no strict retribution by reward or punishment. On the other hand many of Spinoza's sayings if lifted into the theistic region, may be transformed into something noble. The theist, taking up Spinoza's phraseology in a converted sense, may, under this new interpretation, view all passionate action, all sinful choice, as an "inadequate idea of things", as "the preference of a part to the detriment of the whole", while all virtue is seen as an "adequate idea" taking in man's "full relation to himself as a whole, to human society and to God". Again, Spinoza's amor Dei intellectualis becomes finally, when duly corrected, the Beatific Vision, after having been the darker understanding of God enjoyed by Holy men before death, who love all objects in reference to God. Spinoza was not an antinomian in conduct; he recommended and practiced virtues. He was better than his philosophy on its bad side, and worse than his philosophy on its good side after it has been improved by Christian interpretation.

Hobbes

Hobbes stands for ethics on a Materialistic basis. Tracing all human action to self-love, he had to explain the generous virtues as the more respectable exhibitions of that quality when modified by social life. He set various schools of antagonistic thought devising hypotheses to account for disinterested action in man. The Cambridge Platonists unsatisfactorily attacked him on the principle of their eponymous philosopher, supposing the innate noemata to rule the empirical aisthemata by the aid of what Henry More called a "boniform faculty", which tasted "the sweetness and savour of virtue". This calling in of a special faculty had imitators outside the Platonic School; for example in Hutcheson, who had recourse to Divine "implantations" of benevolent disposition and moral sense, which remind us somewhat of synteresis as imperfectly described by Alexander of Hales. A robust reliance on reason to prove ethical truth as it proved mathematical truths, by inspection and analysis, characterized the opposition which Dr. Samuel Clarke presented to Hobbes. It was a fashion of the age to treat philosophy with mathematical rigour; but very different was the "geometrical ethics" of Spinoza, the necessarian, from that of Descartes, the libertarian, who thought that God's free will chose even the ultimate reasons of right and wrong and might have chosen otherwise. If Hobbes has his representatives in the Utilitarians, the Cambridge Platonists have their representatives in more or less of the school of which T. H. Green is a leading light. A universal infinite mind seeks to realize itself finitely in each human mind or brain, which therefore must seek to free itself from the bondage of mere natural causality and rise to the liberty of the spirit, to a complete self-realization in the infinite Self and after its pattern. What this pattern ultimately is Green cannot say; but he holds that our way towards it at present is through the recognized virtues of European civilization, together with the cultivation of science and art. In the like spirit G.E. Moore finds the ascertainable objects that at present can be called "good in themselves" to be social intercourse and aesthetic delight.

Kant

Kant may stand midway between the Pantheistic and the purely Empirical ethics. On the one side he limited our knowledge, strictly so called, of things good to sense-experiences; but on the other he allowed a practical, regulative system of ideas lifting us up to God. Duty as referred to Divine commands was religion, not ethics: it was religion, not ethics, to regard moral precepts in the light of the commands of God. In ethics these were restricted to the autonomous aspect, that is, to the aspect of them under which the will of each man was its own legislator. Man, the noumenon, not the phenomenon, was his own lawgiver and his own end so far as morality went: anything beyond was outside ethics proper. Again, the objects prescribed as good or forbidden as bad did not enter in among the constituents of ethical quality: they were only extrinsic conditions. The whole of morality intrinsically was in the good will as pure from all content or object of a definite kind, from all definite inclination to benevolence and as deriving its whole dignity from respect for the moral law simply as a moral law, self-imposed, and at the same time universalized for all other autonomous individuals of the rational order. For each moral agent as noumenal willed that the maxim of his conduct should become a principle for all moral agents.

We have to be careful how in practice we impute consequences to men who hold false theories of conscience. In our historical sketch we have found Spinoza a necessarian or fatalist; but he believed in effort and exhortation as aids to good life. We have seen Kant assert the non-morality of Divine precept and of the objective fitness of things, but he found a place for both these elements in his system. Similarly Paulsen gives in the body of his work a mundane ethics quite unaffected by his metaphysical principles as stated in his preface to Book II. Luther logically might be inferred to be a thorough antinomian: he declared the human will to be enslaved, with a natural freedom only for civic duties; he taught a theory of justification which was in spite of evil deeds; he called nature radically corrupt and forcibly held captive by the lusts of the flesh; he regarded divine grace as a due and necessary complement to human nature, which as constituted by mere body and soul was a nature depraved; his justification was by faith, not only without works, but even in spite of evil works which were not imputed. Nevertheless he asserted that the good tree of the faith-justified man must bring forth good works; he condemned vice most bitterly, and exhorted men to virtue. Hence Protestants can depict a Luther simply the preacher of good, while Catholics may regard simply the preacher of evil. Luther has both sides.


V. CONSCIENCE IN ITS PRACTICAL WORKING


The supremacy of conscience

The supremacy of conscience is a great theme of discourse. "Were its might equal to its right", says Butler, "it would rule the world". With Kant we could say that conscience is autonomously supreme, if against Kant we added that thereby we meant only that every duty must be brought home to the individual by his own individual conscience, and is to this extent imposed by it; so that even he who follows authority contrary to his own private judgment should do so on his own private conviction that the former has the better claim. If the Church stands between God and conscience, then in another sense also the conscience is between God and the Church. Unless a man is conscientiously submissive to the Catholic Church his subjection is not really a matter of inner morality but is mechanical obedience.


Conscience as a matter of education and perfectibility

As in all other concerns of education, so in the training of conscience we must use the several means. As a check on individual caprice, especially in youth, we must consult the best living authorities and the best traditions of the past. At the same time that we are recipient our own active faculties must exert themselves in the pursuit with a keen outlook for the chances of error. Really unavoidable mistakes will not count against us; but many errors are remotely, when not proximately, preventable. From all our blunders we should learn a lesson. The diligent examiner and corrector of his own conscience has it in his power, by long diligence to reach a great delicacy and responsiveness to the call of duty and of higher virtue, whereas the negligent, and still more the perverse, may in some sense become dead to conscience. The hardening of the heart and the bad power to put light for darkness and darkness for light are results which may be achieved with only too much ease. Even the best criteria will leave residual perplexities for which provision has to be made in an ethical theory of probabilities which will be explained in the article PROBABILISM. Suffice it to say here that the theory leaves intact the old rule that a man in so acting must judge that he certainly is allowed thus to act, even though sometimes it might be more commendable to do otherwise. In inferring something to be permissible, the extremes of scrupulosity and of laxity have to be avoided.


The approvals and reprovals of conscience

The office of conscience is sometimes treated under too narrow a conception. Some writers, after the manner of Socrates when he spoke of his doemon as rather a restrainer than a promoter of action, assign to conscience the office of forbidding, as others assign to law and government the negative duty of checking invasion upon individual liberty. Shaftesbury (Inquiry II, 2, 1) regards conscience as the consciousness of wrongdoing, not of rightdoing. Carlyle in his "Essay on Characteristics" asserts that we should have no sense of having a conscience but for the fact that we have sinned; with which view we may compare Green's idea about a reasoned system of ethics (Proleg., Bk. IV, ch. ii, sect. 311) that its use is negative "to provide a safeguard against the pretext which in a speculative age some inadequate and misapplied theories may afford our selfishness rather than in the way of pointing out duties previously ignored". Others say that an ethics of conscience should no more be hortatory than art should be didactic. Mackenzie (Ethics, 3rd ed., Bk. III, ch. I, sect. 14) prefers to say simply that "conscience is a feeling of pain accompanying and resulting from nonconformity to principle". The suggestion which, by way of contrary, these remarks offer is that we should use conscience largely as an approving and an instigating and an inspiring agency to advance us in the right way. We should not in morals copy the physicists, who deny all attractive force and limit force to vis a tergo, a push from behind. Nor must we think that the positive side of conscience is exhausted in urging obligations: it may go on in spite of Kant, beyond duty to works of supererogation. Of course there is a theory which denies the existence of such works on the principle that every one is simply bound to the better and the best if he feels himself equal to the heroic achievement. This philosophy would lay it down that he who can renounce all and give it to the poor is simply obliged to do so, though a less generous nature is not bound, and may take advantage --if it be an advantage--of its own inferiority. Not such was the way in which Christ put the case: He said hypothetically, "if thou wilt be perfect", and His follower St. Peter said to Ananias "Was not [thy land] thine own? and after it was sold, was it not in thine own power? . . . Thou hast not lied unto men, but unto God." (Acts, v, 4.) We have, then, a sphere of duty and beyond that a sphere of free virtue, and we include both under the domain of conscience. It is objected that only a prig considers the approving side of his conscience, but that is true only of the priggish manner, not of the thing itself; for a sound mind may very well seek the joy which comes from a faithful, generous heart, and make it an effort of conscience that outstrips duty to aim at higher perfection, not under the false persuasion that only after duty has been fulfilled does merit begin, but under the true conviction that duty is meritorious, and that so also is goodness in excess of duty. Not that the eye is to be too narrowly fixed on rewards: these are included, while virtue for virtue's sake and for the sake of God is carefully cultivated.

John Rickaby.