Author(s)' contact information
          Publication 
              Journal of Catholic Legal Studies
          Volume number
              46
          Year
              2007
          First page number
              259
          Last page number
              275
          Country
          United States
              Abstract
              Drawing on Jacques Maritain's doctrine of Knowledge through Connaturality, and on other authors including David Hume and Edmond Cahn, this article argues that judgments of right and wrong are arrived at primarily through immediate discernment, and only secondarily through the application of general principles. It is possible, therefore, for lawyers and clients to arrive at agreement on how to handle their cases, even though they do not agree on the general principles that apply.
          