Philosophers & Human Nature
Sin and Moral Choice
Christian Anthropology
Social Beings & Community
The Virtues
200

This philosopher believed humans were naturally good, but civilization corrupted them.

Jean Jacques Rousseau

200

This is defined as an utterance, deed, or desire contrary to the eternal law.

Sin

200

Catholic doctrine views creation as God’s deliberate act of this.

Love

200

John Donne stated, "Any man's death diminishes me," as every man is a piece of the continent, not an __________.

Island

200

These are attitudes, mindsets, and practices that guide us to leading a morally good life.

The Virtues

400

He famously believed that without government, human lives would be "nasty, brutish and short".

Thomas Hobbes

400

This type of sin is considered "grave" because it breaks or destroys our relationship with God.

Mortal Sin

400

This key factor, besides the ability to reason, makes humans unique compared to animals.

Free (or Free Will/Ability to choose)

400

Maturity comes through working with others, dialogue, and a sense of this, according to Jean Vanier’s Principles.

Belonging

400

Also known as courage or perseverance, this Cardinal Virtue confronts fear, uncertainty, or intimidation.

Fortitude

600

These two Greek philosophers believed human nature was more or less unchangeable by childhood.

Plato and Aristotle

600

Selfishness and anger are examples of this lesser sin that harms our relationship with God but does not destroy it.

Venial Sin

600


This biblical truth about humans states that we are a mixture of earth and this divine element.

Divine Breath

600

Jean Vanier’s fifth principle states we need to find meaning in life and choose to constantly move toward this.

Connectedness

600

Defined as a selfless, unconditional love towards one’s neighbours and God, often translated as "agape".

Charity

800

The Church teaches we are created good, in the image of God, but we are also given this power to choose positive or sinful actions.

Free Will

800

This third necessary condition, along with a serious act and full knowledge, must be met for a sin to be considered mortal.

Full Consent of the Will

800

Christian Anthropology Principle #3 states that to be human is to be essentially good, despite the capacity for this.

Disorder (and Sin)

800

The sources identify this specific legal practice as the most brutal or worst possible punishment we can inflict on someone.

Solitary Confinement

800

This sin against the virtue of Hope is defined as a failure to see that reaching heaven is difficult.

Presumption

1000

The philosophical field defined as the study of humans, cultures, and their development.

Anthropology

1000

Wrath, Pride, and Gluttony are three of the seven types of these.

Deadly Sins

1000

This trait of humanity means we can think about the impact of our actions, make our own choices, and are held responsible for them.

Rational and Free

1000

Cain famously asked the Lord this question after murdering his brother Abel.

Am I my brother's keeper?

1000

This Cardinal Virtue, also called wisdom, is the ability to make rational and moral decisions and judge a situation intellectually.

Prudence