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Displaying: 21-37 of 37 documents


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21. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 26
Grant M. Sassse, Thomas P. Harmon Catholic Dogma vs. Social Science Dogmatism: A Catholic Counselor’s Perspective
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This article explores how social science literature views dogmatism and how the documents of the Catholic Church and her teachings are seldom regarded in the conceptualization of the human person, specifically focusing on the helping professions. This article examines dogmatism from a Catholic anthropological perspective and with a full appreciation for the Catholic intellectual tradition. It will be shown how through basic clinical skills, one can believe the teachings of the Church's Magisterium and still be an effective and ethical counselor. A distinction between beliefs and actions will be made, showing how relativism is not the only acceptable belief system for helping professionals.
book reviews
22. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 26
Steven M. Krason Jane F. Adolphe and Ronald J. Rychlak, editors, Clerical Sexual Misconduct: An Interdisciplinary Analysis
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23. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 26
Adam L. Tate Benjamin B. Alexander, editor. Good Things out of Nazareth: The Uncollected Letters of Flannery O’Connor and Friends
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24. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 26
Emil B. Berendt Thomas C. Behr, Social Justice & Subsidiarity: Luigi Taparelli and the Origins of Modern Catholic Social Thought
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25. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 26
Vincent Stine James Felak, The Pope in Poland: The Pilgrimages of John Paul II, 1979–1991; and George Weigel, The Next Pope: The Office of Peter and a Church in Mission
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26. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 26
David A. Tamisiea Habiger Institute for Catholic Leadership, The Heart of Culture: A Brief History of Western Education
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27. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 26
Tomas Diaz, Joseph Aquila Andrew W. Jones, Before Church and State: A Study of Social Order in the Sacramental Kingdom of St. Louis IX
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28. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 26
Dominic A. Aquila Michael P. Krom, Justice and Charity: An Introduction to Aquinas’s Moral, Economic, and Political Thought
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29. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 26
Dominic A. Aquila Joseph M. McFadden, Barbed Wire from Invention to Monopoly: The Story of American Style Capitalism in the Gilded Age
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30. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 26
Clyde Ray C. Bradley Thompson, America’s Revolutionary Mind: A Moral History of the American Revolution and the Declaration that Defined It
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31. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 26
Diane T. Aquila, Dominic A. Aquila Eric Wearne, Defining Hybrid Homeschools in America: Little Platoons
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public and church affairs
32. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 26
Stephen M. Krason American Criminal Justice in Disarray
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This was one of SCSS president Stephen M. Krason’s “Neither Left nor Right, but Catholic” columns that appeared in Crisismagazine.com and The Wanderer. At a time when there is increased discussion about the need for criminal justice reform, he points to several areas that must be addressed: overcriminalization (making illegal too many kinds of actions), vagueness of laws, the decline of mens rea, too much readiness on the part of American police to arrest, excessive incarceration, and prosecutorial abuse.
33. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 26
Steven M. Krason Time For a Non-Feminist Reappraisal of the Role of Women
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This was one of SCSS president Stephen M. Krason’s “Neither Left nor Right, but Catholic” columns that appeared in Crisismagazine.com and The Wanderer. It discusses, in brief, the damage done by feminism. It singles out a few areas: the problems caused by the integration of women into the military, the need for a reassessment of women and work, the need to show a renewed respect for women who are full-time mothers, the role of women in the Church, and the need to make the case insistently to women how they have suffered the most from the sexual revolution and contraceptive use
34. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 26
Steven M. Krason Time to Think of Voting as a Privilege
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This was one of SCSS president Stephen M. Krason’s “Neither Left nor Right, but Catholic” columns that appeared in The Wanderer. In the wake of the controversy about the integrity and legitimacy of the 2020 U.S. presidential election, which was caused in significant part by changes in voting procedures to make it utterly easy to register and vote and even downplayed voter identification requirements. Krason argues that these changes have been precipitated by the ingraining of the view that voting should be understood as a right and if we think of voting not as a right but a privilege—and a corresponding duty, as a means to check a tendency to overreaching and corrupt government—such problems and abuses could be avoided.
documentation
35. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 26
Msgr. Robert J. Batule In Memoriam: Archbishop John J. Myers, 1941–2020
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36. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 26
28th Anniversary National Meeting-Conference Schedule
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37. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 26
About the Authors
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