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401. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
Joseph A. Varacalli Remarks
402. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
Mark Lowery Trinitarian Foundations for Subjectivity, Solidarity, and Subsidiarity
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Since we are created in the image of the Trinitarian God, it comes as no surprise that the theology of the Trinity has anthropological implications which can serve to illumine the Catholic social principles of subjectivity, solidarity and subsidiarity. This illumination serves as a response to the modern and postmodern objection that revealed religion is prohibitive of human flourishing. Trinitarian doctrine, far from being a distant theological construct, is friendly to our being: it grounds our human dignity (subjectivity) insofar as each Trinitarian person has his own substantial being as a person; it grounds our communal nature (solidarity) insofar as the relationality of the Trinitarian persons is intrinsic to their personhood; and because the unity of the Trinity cannot absorb its relationality, it even points in some important directions for our understanding of the State's relationship to society (subsidiarity).
403. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
William Murphy Bishop James McHugh, R.I.P.: Faith And New Works
404. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
Kevin Schmiesing Catholic Critics of the New Deal: "Alternative" Traditions in Catholic Social Thought
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Although Monsignor John A. Ryan is the central character in conventional historical treatments of American Catholic social thought in the 1930s, there were other important figures representing Catholic approaches to the social question. Many of these social thinkers divergedfrom Ryan, particularly on the point of the degree to which they were willing to grant government a dominant role in the realization of social justice. The Catholic critics of the New Deal deserve a place of prominence in our historical understanding of Catholic social thought in the United States.
405. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
Bevil Bramwell The Faith-Culture Dialogue: Karl Rahner and Hans Urs von Von Balthasar
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The Kantian and Patristic starting points of Karl Rahner and Hans Urs von Balthasar respectively show up in their differing descriptions of the inculturation of the Christian Faith. Despite the dispute over the notion of the "anonymous Christian," the two authors' practical theologies are very similar. Von Balthasar's retrieval of the notion of form takes us beyond the limitations of Rahner's focus on the conditions of possibility of the faith which leaves the "anonymity" of the faith amorphous and describes the concrete encounter which constitutes concrete Christian existence. This retrieval also enables a more detailed description of the form of Christian existence itself
406. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
Timothy Brandyberry Catholic Social Work Models for the Future: From Social Worker to Catholic Social Servant?
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This article examines the transformation of the field of social work over the past century, noting its increasing and almost total secularist viewpoint at this juncture, as well as its overall failure to provide genuine help to those it so laudably seeks to serve. A call for strong reform is made, using the concept of a Catholic social servant as a viable and very desirable alternative and competitor to the present model The article makes use of (among other sources) the social encyclicals to make the case for social work to be something much more than it has become. The best of social work wisdom can be brought into a model based on Catholic social and moral teaching, producing a field ordered by Truth and filled with Divine mercy, thus well equipped to serve the poor and suffering more effectively — in short, a new social work profession for the New Springtime foreseen by Pope John Paul II.
407. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
Nicholas Lund-Molfese Biotechnology and Human Dignity in the Thought of Germain Grisez
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Reasoned argumentation has an important part to play in helping persons make morally upright choices, however it is not, and can never be thought of by Christians, as an adequate substitute for Christian hope. Modern technology provides choices for avoiding suffering and death that can be immoral Without Christian hope it is unrealistic to expect persons to choose well even in such difficult cases
408. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
Richard M. Doerflinger The Intellectual Legacy of James T. McHugh
409. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
Maurizio Ragazzi A Revival of the Natural Law Tradition in International Law?
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In international law, there are norms from which no derogation is permitted (jus cogens) and obligations binding on all States without exception, every State having an interest in their protection (erga omnes) What is the ultimate foundation of these categories of norms and obligations? Is it the will of the stronger States (or of a majority of them acting arbitrarily) or is it a higher moral law to which International law, like all human law, must conform?
410. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
Patricia Mulrooney Reflections On Bishop McHugh
411. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
David L. Gregory Bishop James T McHugh: The Austerity and Vigor of the Church Militant
412. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
Vincent Jeffries Integralism and Benevolent Love as Virtue: Directions for Family Studies
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This article presents a theoretical and research agenda for the study of marriage and the family. This agenda is formulated on the basis of an integral perspective which combines faith, reason, and empiricism in a harmonious scientific system of truth. The integral approach to family studies is presented as focusing on the causes and consequences of benevolent love. This focus is explored relative to marriage and family as a group and as an institution. Scientific, reform, and practical aspects of an integral approach to family studies are considere
413. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
Dianne Traflet Bishop McHugh As Mentor
414. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
David G. Songy Relying on the Wisdom of the Catechism of the Catholic Church in Developing a Model for Pastoral Psychology
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This article is an attempt to advance the discussion on the necessary integration of pastoral theology and psychology in pastoral psychology. After briefly reviewing the history of psychology as it diverged from its philosophical roots, this article then presents the thought of The Catechism of the Catholic Church on the nature of the human person, focusing on the subject of the passions as discussed by St. Thomas Aquinas in the Summa Theologica. A case example is given to contrast a counseling approach that is not specifically pastoral with one that is rooted in Catholic teaching.
415. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
Humphrey Waldock Supreme Star Chambers
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U.S. and Canadian critics complain of activist judges; judges complain of ignorant critics. Their debate is vain because both sides have spurned God, Christ and the Magisterium who founded our laws and gave them unity, consistency and coherence. Instead of applying divine principle, purpose and authority, judges now interpret words of human Will and critics appeal to it: i.e. public policy, public opinion or statutes all controlled ultimately by sexual hedonists in Hollywood. Judicial independence and professionalism have gone. Holds that all must proclaim Divine and Papal authority or perish.
416. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
Mercedes Arzu Wilson The Practice of Natural Family Planning versus the Use of Artifical Birth Control: Family, Sexual and Moral Issues
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For many years, research has pointed to substantial differences between couples who practice natural family planning (NFP) and couples who use artifical birth control. Using data collected from a sample of women in the United States of America who practice natural family planning and comparing them to well-known national surveys, this study examines the effects of natural family planning and artifical birth control on several dimensions of marital andfamily Ufe. The study finds that NFP women have lower rates of abortion and divorce, (0.2%), than women in the national samples. The NFP women are more likely to be married and are more likely to recommend premartial chastity to young women. The study also finds a high level of success in family life among NFP women, as well as strong religious faith. Results support the hypothesis that naturalfamily planning is associated with positive spousal relationships and family stability. Interpretations of new data are discussed.
417. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
William C. Zehringer "Fahrenheit 452": Augustine as a Companion on the Journey
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This essay, attempts to show why so many luminaries and discerning minds throughout the ages, both within the Catholic Church and outside of it, have held St.Augustine in the highest esteem. It will show that a great part of his enduring reputation rests on the Confessions, the immortal narrative of his difficult ascent tothe Throne of God. For it is there above all that the saint offers instruction in the choices we all must make, as we journey through a fallen world. The incomparable journey of his soul's journey has endeared Augustine to countless readers and pilgrim souls, as a guide to sanctity and the fullness ofgrace
418. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 7
Stephen M. Krason On Sunburned Kids, Arbitrary Sheriffs, and the Folly and Danger of the Child "Protective" System
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Explains that a recent highly publicized case of a mother being jailed for child endangerment because her children were sunburned must be understood in thecontext of a systemically abusive, unaccountable, and anti-parent child "protective" system in the U.S. Argues that citizen action and legislative change is needed to alter this system.
419. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 8
Vincent Jeffries The Nature of Integralism
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This article is an introduction to a symposium on integralism. To clarify the nature of integralism, Pitirim A. Sorokin's ideas regarding culture types, their corresponding systems of truth and knowledge, and integralism as an innovative ontology and epistemology are described. The reasons why integralism should be considered an incipient paradigm in the social sciences are advanced. The remaining articles in the symposium are summarized in terms of the various projects necessary to establish integralism as a viable tradition of thought in the social sciences.
420. Catholic Social Science Review: Volume > 8
Lisa Lickona The Christocentrism of Pope John Paul II: Foundation for a "Catholic Integralism"
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More than one writer in the field of social science has advocated the Integralisnn of Pitirim Sorokin as a worthy starting point for development of an epistemology that might serve the work of the Catholic social scientist. Because Sorokin's Integralism provides a theory of truth that embraces supernatural knowledge and an epistemology that makes room for the act of faith, his theory is of particular interest to Catholic scholars. The purpose of this paper is to present the sources for such a "Catholic variant" of Integralism in the works of Pope John Paul II, particularly his encyclical Fides et Ratio.