<p>1. Introduction</p><p> </p><p>2. Truth and Holiness</p><p>2.1 Seeds of Conversion</p><p> 2.1.1 External Pressures</p><p> 2.1.2 Doctrine and Salvation</p><p> 2.1.3 Reason and Conscience</p><p>2.2 Growth to Conversion</p><p> 2.2.1 Dogmatic and Sacramental Principles</p><p> 2.2.2 Principle of Economy</p><p> 2.2.3 Patristic Influence</p><p>2.3 Hostility to Religious Liberalism</p><p> 2.3.1 Liberalism as Rationalism</p><p> 2.3.2 Doctrine and Salvation</p><p> 2.3.3 Affinity with Liberal Catholics</p><p>2.4 Conclusion</p><p> </p><p>3. Reason and Belief</p><p>3.1 Illative Sense.</p><p> 3.1.1 Inference and Assent</p><p> 3.1.2 Inductive Process</p><p>3.2 Sufficient Reasoning</p><p> 3.2.1 Conditional Inference</p><p> 3.2.2 Unconditional Assent</p><p>3.3 Newman’s Hermeneutics</p><p> 3.3.1 Analogies</p><p> 3.3.2 Role of the Will</p><p>3.4 Objective Truth</p><p> 3.4.1 Subjective Process</p><p> 3.4.2 Concrete and Abstract Reasoning</p><p> 3.4.3 Exclusion of Doubt</p><p>3.5 Moral Demonstration</p><p> 3.5.1 Moral Certitude</p><p> 3.5.2 Practical Certainty</p><p> 3.5.3 Normativity</p><p>3.6 Conclusion</p><p> </p><p>4. Hermeneutics of the Imagination</p><p>4.1 Theory of Knowledge</p><p> 4.1.1 Components of Knowledge</p><p> 4.1.2 Role of Hypothesis</p><p>4.2 Moral Rhetoric</p><p> 4.2.1 Interpretative and Assertive Roles </p><p> 4.2.2 Creativity and Intensity</p><p> 4.2.3 Imagination and Action</p><p>4.3 Theological Hermeneutics</p><p> 4.3.1 Abstract and Concrete Reasoning</p><p> 4.3.2 New Instrument for Theology</p><p> 4.3.3 Notional and Real Assent</p><p>4.4 Theological History</p><p> 4.4.1 Via Media</p><p> 4.4.2 Development of Doctrine</p><p> 4.4.3 Principle of Economy</p><p>4.5 Conclusion</p><p> </p><p>Chapter 5. Moral Law</p><p>5.1 First Principles</p><p> 5.1.1 Experience and Abstraction</p><p> 5.1.2 Character and Assent</p><p>5.2 Meaning of Moral Law</p><p> 5.2.1 Genesis of Moral Law</p><p> 5.2.2 Application of Moral Law</p><p>5.3 Dispute Over Lying.</p><p> 5.3.1 Cautious Dispensation of Truth</p><p> 5.3.2 Just Cause</p><p>5.4 Refinement of Moral Law</p><p> 5.4.1 Historical Consciousness</p><p> 5.4.2 Interpretation of Moral Doctrine</p><p>5.5 Conclusion</p><p>-</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Chapter 6. Moral Conscience </p><p>6.1 Moral Sense and Rationality</p><p> 6.1.1 Informal Inference</p><p> 6.1.2 Moral Certitude</p><p>6.2 Sense of Duty and Responsibility</p><p> 6.2.1 Voice of God</p><p> 6.2.2 Theonomous Autonomy</p><p> 6.2.3 God, Truth, and Holiness</p><p>6.3 Conclusion</p><p> </p><p>Chapter 7. Church Tradition</p><p>7.1 The Faithful and Theologians.</p><p> 7.1.1 Consent of the Faithful</p><p> 7.1.2 Freedom of Theologians</p><p>7.2 Church Magisterium</p><p> 7.2.1 Church Teaching</p><p> 7.2.2 Papal Infallibility</p><p>7.3 Truth and Holiness</p><p> 7.3.1 Supremacy of Conscience</p><p> 7.3.2 Patience, Silence, and Prayer.</p><p>7.4 Conclusion</p><p> </p><p>Bibliography</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p> </p>