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Concupiscence
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==Further reading== * {{cite book |first=Robert Merrihew |last=Adams |chapter=Original Sin: A Study in the Interaction of Philosophy and Theology |pages=80ff |editor-first=Francis J. |editor-last=Ambrosio |editor-link=Francis J. Ambrosio |title=The Question of Christian Philosophy Today |publisher=Fordham University Press |place=New York |year=1999 |series=Perspectives in Continental Philosophy |number=9 |ref=none}} * {{cite book |editor1-first=Joseph A. |editor1-last=Komonchak |editor2-first=Mary |editor2-last=Collins |editor3-first=Dermot A. |editor3-last=Lane |title=The New Dictionary of Theology |place=Wilmington, Delaware |publisher=Michael Glazier |year=1987 |page=220 |ref=none}} * {{cite book |first=Adam |last=Smith |title=Glasgow Edition of the Works and Correspondence |volume=1 The Theory of Moral Sentiments |year=1759 |ref=none}} Part VII Section II Chapter I Paragraphs 1β9, Adam Smith's recounting of Plato's description of the soul, including concupiscence. {{Authority control}} [[Category:Christian ethics]] [[Category:Catholic theology and doctrine]] [[Category:Christian terminology]]
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