Conscience
The capacity to recognize and follow moral principles; the internal voice guiding moral judgment. Theological and philosophical accounts differ: Aquinas distinguished synderesis (innate grasp of natural law) from conscientia (application to particular acts); Butler treated conscience as an intuitive moral sense; Freud analyzed conscience as the superego, internalized parental authority. Conscience's nature—innate, learned, divine—remains debated.
Real World
Cardinal Newman's own conversion from Anglicanism to Catholicism in 1845 exemplifies his belief that conscience — as God's voice — must be followed even when it conflicts with institutional loyalty.
Exam Focus
Compare at least two accounts (e.g. Aquinas vs Freud) in 'discuss' answers; single-source responses rarely exceed Level 3.
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