2017
DOI: 10.1111/jore.12189
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A Loss of Judgment: The Dismissal of the Judicial Conscience in Recent Christian Ethics

Abstract: Christian ethicists have neglected conscience, understood as an individual's moral self-awareness before a locus of accountability and judgment, over the last few decades. The aim of this essay is to suggest how this neglect came about. I draw on the work of Paul Lehmann and Oliver O'Donovan to illustrate how ethicists in the twentieth century became suspicious of conscience because of its association with the alleged ahistorical individualism of Immanuel Kant's work. I argue that a social-historicist concepti… Show more

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