Further, in his conversation he will shrink from talking of men's faults, and will be careful to speak but sparingly of human infirmity: but he will dwell at length onhuman virtue or power, and the way whereby it may be perfected.
Now this is because the safe-keeping of a thing depends on its cause, and the cause of human virtue is a human act, so that when human acts cease, the virtue acquired thereby decreases and at last ceases altogether.
Further, that which pertains to a human virtue is in our power, since it is for things that are in our power that we are praised or blamed.
I answer that, As shown above, it is by human virtue that human acts are rendered good; hence, any habit that is always the principle of a good act, may be called a human virtue.
Hence it is evident that euboulia is a human virtue.
Human virtue should be equal to human calamity," were his august words when all was lost, and men's minds were sinking under the accumulated agony of defeat and despair.
It was a characteristic trait of his to expect good results from reliance on human virtue, and his whole success as a persuades of men was largely to be explained by the subtle flattery of this trustful attitude towards them.
An appeal from Luther and Calvin to the standards of rational nature, to human virtue, to human equality, rather than to exclusively Catholic standards, was certain of success in a large class of minds.
And therefore, human virtue, of which we are speaking now, cannot belong to the body, but belongs only to that which is proper to the soul.
Now as natural virtue is in natural things, so is human virtue in rational beings.
Objection 1: It would seem that it is not essential to human virtue to be an operative habit.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "human virtue" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.