CONSCIENCE REVISITED
“Every person must follow his own conscience!” This statement, unfortunately, is often misunderstood. Many take it to imply that personal conscience is the only thing a responsible person must be concerned with. This implication is entirely unwarranted. A good person will aware that his or her conscience guides him or her correctly to what is really good to the extent that he or she can discover it. Such a person is concerned with knowing and doing what is truly good.
Important distinctions in the use of the word conscience.
Psychological Conscience. “Psychological conscience´ is essentially related to feelings of moral approval or disapproval. Within the depth of one’s own being, virtually everyone experiences at times approval or anxiety of a condemnation of one’s own decision. Conscience in this sense involves the internalization of parental and social norms and even of traditional taboos. Conscience in this sense is frequently found to condemn what is not wrong or to approve what is wrong, it cannot in itself provide decisive moral guidance. A person’s critical moral judgment must determine the validity of the impulses of psychological conscience.
Particular Moral Conscience. The judgment of conscience is the result of the thoughtful evaluation a person makes about the moral goodness or badness of a particular action. Conscience in this sense can be defined as one’s best judgment as to what in the circumstane4s is the morally right thing to do. It is in this sense of a judgment about the rightness or wrongness of particular acts that St. Thomas Aquinas and much of Catholic tradition after him use the term “conscience”.
It is important to note that since the judgment of conscience is an act of the intellect, it cannot merely be a feeling or a persona decision to act or live in a certain way. Concern for the truth is essential. Intelligent judgments, not feelings or choices, should direct the lives of mature persons.
General Moral Conscience. A person’s awareness of the basic principles for making moral judgements. A conscience which sees and recognizes the demands of he divine law. Thus a person knows that one should do good and avoid evil; that one should aim at arming no one; that one should love God and neighbor, and that one must never do deeds that are of their nature base, that always attack basic goods in ourselves or other persons. Typical adult Catholics grasp personally not only the broad truth that killing innocent t people is wrong but also the more specific truths that abortion and suicide are always wrong.
Deep within his conscience man discovers a law which he has not laid upon himself but which he must obey, ever calling him to love and to do what is good and avoid evil. It often happens that conscience goes astray through ignorance which it is unable to avoid, without thereby losing its dignity. This cannot be said of the man who takes little trouble to find out what is true and good, or when conscience is by degrees almost blinded through the habit of committing sin. In order to have a good conscience, man must seek the truth and must make judgments in accordance with the same truth.
Transcendental Conscience. The dynamic thrust toward self-transcendence at the core of a person’s very subjectivity. Some rejects any normative significance to conscience understood in a merely psychological sense. They say that conscience refers to the whole person as a moral self, as a being inwardly impelled to act responsibly in accordance with the truth. Our conscience is intimately linked to our quest for truth. Human persons are unique in that they are question-asking beings, anxious to discover the truth. Conscience refers to the inner dynamism of the human person, impelling the individual to discover the truth abut what is to be done and what he or she is to be. This position however misrepresents the relation between the particular judgment of conscience and the knowledge of basic moral principles. It rejects the proper role of principles it makes conscience an almost mystical and unanalyzable component of the person. Unless there are such principles it is hard to see how the “dynamic thrust toward self-transcendence” could be determined to be a movement toward authentic self-transcendence, for without critical principles it could become a dynamism toward self-destruction on self-deception. If the moral law has no definite implications, it is difficult to grasp any intelligent patterns whatsoever in the workings of conscience.