The distinctions drawn between men are commonly based on the outward appearance of goodness or badness, on the ground of moral beauty or moral deformity--is this classification scientific?
Moral beauty is the product of the natural man, spiritual beauty of the spiritual man.
October 10th What is the essential difference between the Christian and the not-a-Christian, between the spiritual beauty and the moral beauty?
The distinctions drawn between men, in short, are commonly based on the outward appearance of goodness or badness, on the ground of moral beauty or moral deformity--is this classification scientific?
From Spinoza downward through the whole naturalistic school, Moral Beauty is persistently regarded as synonymous with religion and the spiritual life.
But whatever may be the case with material beauty, moral beauty at all events seems to contain an element not identical with the satisfaction produced by the appearance of perfect utility, but suggestive of an unfulfilled ideal.
And where there is no ideal of character there can hardly be such a thing as a sense of moral beauty.
How could a man glide into the lower walks of life, whose mission it was to set forth the types of moral beauty by opposing them, to use his phrase, "to the hideousnesses of vice?
From St. Augustine (for he often quoted from sacred works): "Moral beauty is the brilliancy of the Good.
St. Augustine said of moral beauty that it is the splendor of goodness.
Now, we think that they resolve themselves into one and the same beauty, moral beauty, meaning by that, with moral beauty properly so called, all spiritual beauty.
Then physical beauty, moral beauty, and intellectual beauty, are strangers to each other.
Be that as it may, with but one great exception, I think the world now finds its best ideas of moral beauty in Shakespeare's women.
But as he possessed great refinement of mind, never losing sight of an ideal of moral beauty, such an existence speedily became odious to him.
Whether these loves were real or not, however, it must be borne in mind that Byron deemed all physical beauty to be nothing if unaccompanied by moral beauty.
We saw all this already when we were examining his comparison of the perception of moral beauty to the perception of the heat of ginger.
Moral beauty of some of the legends of the ascetics, 156.
It has had an influence which the worship of the Pagan goddesses could never possess, for these had been almost destitute of moral beauty, and especially of that kind of moral beauty which is peculiarly feminine.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "moral beauty" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.