2022
DOI: 10.1007/s11061-022-09751-8
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The Invisibility of the Soul and the Rhetoric of Dissent: Conscience and the Wycliffite Heresy

Abstract: This essay argues that the use of conscience as a justification for dissent has an even longer history than has often been assumed by intellectual historians of the Reformation. Through a close examination of the English Wycliffite Sermons (c.1380s–1390s) and the Testimony of William Thorpe (1407), it offers the first extended consideration of the use of the word “conscience” in Wycliffite texts, using this as the point of departure for an assessment of Lollard characterisations of human interiority more gener… Show more

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“…Individualized consciousness is also vulnerable to manipulation by the media and other forces. Thus, along with freedom of choice, individualization poses certain threats to social consensus and cultural continuity (Plimmer, 2023). Excessive individualism can, sometimes, manifest as narcissism, where individuals become overly self-centered and lacking in empathy.…”
Section: Philosophical Approaches To the Study Of Consciencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Individualized consciousness is also vulnerable to manipulation by the media and other forces. Thus, along with freedom of choice, individualization poses certain threats to social consensus and cultural continuity (Plimmer, 2023). Excessive individualism can, sometimes, manifest as narcissism, where individuals become overly self-centered and lacking in empathy.…”
Section: Philosophical Approaches To the Study Of Consciencementioning
confidence: 99%