A student's Thomistic-style explanation for lust: desire outruns reason and proper relation, so the act becomes sinful.
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misordered desire
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "because like lusting someone is more driven by your like physical drive and here like francisca she went over her ability to reason she..."
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Key Notes
A student answer Jiang entertains describes Francesca's sin as misordered desire that overran reason and betrayed an existing bond.
Timestamped Evidence
"because like lusting someone is more driven by your like physical drive and here like francisca she went over her ability to reason she..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
A source-grounded reading of the seminar's central move: Inferno is not only a theater of punishments but a machine for moral reflection, and Virgil's authority keeps showing the limits that Dante will eventually have...
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