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Cardinal virtues
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=== In relation to the seven deadly sins === In the High Middle Ages, some authors opposed the seven virtues (cardinal plus theological) to the [[seven deadly sins]]. However, “treatises exclusively concentrating on both septenaries are actually quite rare.” and “examples of late medieval catalogues of virtues and vices which extend or upset the double heptad can be easily multiplied.”<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bejczy |first=István P. |url=https://archive.org/details/cardinalvirtuesm00bejc |title=The Cardinal Virtues in the Middle Ages: A Study in Moral Thought from the Fourth to the Fourteenth Century |date=2011 |publisher=Brill |location=Boston |pages=[https://books.google.com/books?id=VgPRu0CJ_sQC&pg=PA228 228-229] |isbn=9789004210141 |url-access=limited}}</ref> And there are problems with this parallelism: {{Blockquote|The opposition between the virtues and the vices to which these works allude despite the frequent inclusion of other schemes may seem unproblematic at first sight. The virtues and the vices seem to mirror each other as positive and negative moral attitudes, so that medieval authors, with their keen predilection for parallels and oppositions, could conveniently set them against each other. … Yet artistic representations such as Conrad’s trees are misleading in that they establish oppositions between the principal virtues and the capital vices which are based on mere juxtaposition. As to content, the two schemes do not match each other. The capital vices of lust and avarice, for instance, contrast with the remedial virtues of chastity and generosity, respectively, rather than with any theological or cardinal virtue; conversely, the virtues of hope and prudence are opposed to despair and foolishness rather than to any deadly sin. Medieval moral authors were well aware of the fact. Actually, the capital vices are more often contrasted with the remedial or contrary virtues in medieval moral literature than with the principal virtues, while the principal virtues are frequently accompanied by a set of mirroring vices rather than by the seven deadly sins.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Cardinal Virtues in the Middle Ages: A Study in Moral Thought from the Fourth to the Fourteenth Century|last=Bejczy|first=István Pieter|year=2011|isbn=9789004210141|publisher=Brill|pages=[https://books.google.com/books?id=VgPRu0CJ_sQC&pg=PA232 232-233]}}</ref>}}
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