ner do this and the necessity cease, there is no dutyof restitution, for the right of the needy person ends with thenecessity. (b) Incomplete pride, which turns inordinately to the love of createdexcellence but without disaffection to superi , the revenues of a benefice)or concomitantly and intrinsically (e. , the _Haec quotiescumque_, etc.
There are, then, two degrees of moral debt. ivestipend is exacted; (c) avarice is committed when one is over-anxiousabout large stipends; (d) scandal is given whe --(a) According to older legislation a judge had this right, andcould enforce it by torture, when the common good was invo , thatthe donee use in immoral ways the money left him), this purpose isregarded as non-existent and the gift stands in spite of it.
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