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conscience

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conscience

Inner sense of what is morally right and wrong. Austrian psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud held that conscience is the superego.

English theologian Joseph Butler, the leading conscience theorist in ethics, saw the voice of conscience as ‘the candle of the Lord’. He argued that conscience is the part of human nature that guides us towards the moral integration of the self. Critics of conscience theories argue that the idea of conscience is an unreliable measure of a person's ability to choose right over wrong or good over evil.

Development of conscience

A baby reacts to the pleasure principle and is very self-centred, not in the sense of being selfish, but as a proper concern for self-preservation. Food and loving attention give pleasure and the baby expresses needs by crying. As a person grows older, part of the natural development is to learn to make decisions and to judge the effects of those decisions on other people. This is when the idea of the conscience comes into play.

The conscience has been described as an inner feeling or voice which seems to ‘speak’ to people about what is morally right and wrong. Some think that the existence of the conscience is determined by the influences in a person's life; it depends upon how a person is brought up and is behaviour that has to be learned.

Prisoner of conscience

A prisoner of conscience is a person confined because of their beliefs or opinions, usually political dissenters or conscientious objectors. Amnesty International campaigns for the release of such prisoners. Notable examples of prisoners of conscience include Nelson Mandela, who was imprisoned in South Africa from 1964 to 1990 because of his beliefs against apartheid (the separation of black and white South Africans).



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? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
But Soothness pricked on his palfrey and passed them all and came to the King's court, where he told Conscience all about the matter, and Conscience told the King.
Lord Dawlish, if he had been able to diagnose correctly the almost paternal attitude which had become his host's normal manner these days, would have been equally embarrassed but less startled, for conscience had already suggested to him from time to time that he had been guilty of a feeling toward Elizabeth warmer than any feeling that should come to an engaged man.
And this is the Hungry Tiger, the terror of the jungle, who longs to devour fat babies but is prevented by his conscience from doing so.
 
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