Christ and the modern conscience /
by Jacques Leclerq; translated by Ronald Matthews.
- New York : Sheed & Ward, 1962.
- 289 p.; 23 cm.
Contents: Chapter 1 How the moral question arises The origin of morality The moral problem in the twentieth century Christianity and moral thinking Chapter 2 Wisdom morality and code morality The starting point of ethics Wisdom morality Code morality Chapter 3 The moral imperative Eudaimonism The Stoics and the order of nature The Christian contribution Christian moralism Kant and the categorical imperative Antimoralism The object of ethics Moral obligation Chapter 4 The ways of the good The two ways of ethics The problem of reduction to the one The elimination of obstacles Chapter 5 Ethics and society Ethics as a product of the human community The wise men's ethics as against social ethics The duty of altruism Chapter 6 Moral values The law of unity and multiplicity The law of the creature The threshold of morality The momentary and the continuous Absolute good and the contingence of the means to it Inner life and action Creative activity Indiidual good and social good Suffering and sin Death