Contents
Foreword: Capreolus’s Defense of St. Thomas’s Teachingon the Virtues - Servais Pinckaers, O.P.
Translators’ Introduction
Acknowledgments
Whether Habitual Virtues Are Necessary to Man (on d.23)
Whether Faith Is a Virtue Infused by God (on d.24)
Whether Faith Is of Things Seen (on d.25)
Whether Hope Is a Theological Virtue Really Distinct from Faith and Charity (on d.26)
Whether a Man Ought, out of Charity, to Love God More Than Himself (on dd.27–30)
Whether Faith Remains in Heaven (on dd.31‒32)
Whether by Human Acts Habits of Virtue Are Acquired Which Exist in the Sensitive Appetite, That Is, in the Concupiscible or Irascible Powers, as in Their Subject (on d.33)
Whether the Gifts of the Holy Spirit Are Habits Distinct from the Virtues (on dd.34‒35)
Whether the Cardinal Virtues Are Interconnected in Such a Way That He Who Possesses One Possesses All (on dd.36‒40)
Notes on Opponents
Bibliographical Note
Indices