Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.2 DU
Summary of text [comment] page 77
Under sinful circumstances, a sinner may choose a good on “his” own, but not the moral good that is the object of virtue. “He” can choose only limited goods, provided, of course, that “his” dispositions have not already been trained by sinful habitual actions.
[Here, the model of intersecting nested forms assists.
Even when consciencelacking has made the person unfree (that is, dependent on the thinkgroup), the parallel vertical nested form of thinkdivine still interpellates.]