San Diego Law Review
Document Type
Symposium Article
Abstract
Conscience, like most words that describe human experience and recommend human action, has changed its meanings over time and takes on subtly different meanings in different contexts. Since the time of Thomas Aquinas, when conscience referred to moral judgments about action, and our founding era, when "freedom of conscience" dominantly referred to individual religious liberty, our understanding has evolved. In this paper, I concentrate on present usage. My aims are partially descriptive and mainly normative. My hope is that by clarifying various ways the notion of conscience is conceived, I can contribute to a thoughtful elaboration of normative issues concerning responses to assertions of conscience and to near relatives of such assertions.
Recommended Citation
Kent Greenawalt,
The Significance of Conscience,
47
San Diego L. Rev.
901
(2010).
Available at:
https://digital.sandiego.edu/sdlr/vol47/iss4/3