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ways. Sometimes they are taken as passions--arising, that is, with a certain commotion of the soul. And thus they are commonly understood, and in this sense they are only in the sensitive appetite. They may, however, be taken in another way, as far as they are simple affections without passion or commotion of the soul, and thus they are acts of the will. And in this sense, too, they are attributed to the angels and to God. But if taken in this sense, they do not belong to different powers, but only to one power, which is called the will.
   Reply Obj. 2: The will itself may be said to [be] irascible, as far as it wills to repel evil, not from any sudden movement of a passion, but from a judgment of the reason. And in the same way the will may be said to be concupiscible on account of its desire for good. And thus in the irascible and concupiscible are charity and hope--that is, in the will as ordered to such acts. And in this way, too, we may understand the words quoted (De Spiritu et Anima); that the irascible and concupiscible powers are in the soul before it is united to the body (as long as we understand priority of nature, and not of time), although there is no need to have faith in what that book says. Whence the answer to the third objection is clear.
   QUESTION 83

   OF FREE-WILL (In Four Articles)

   We now inquire concerning free-will. Under this head there are four points of inquiry:
   (1) Whether man has free-will?
   (2) What is free-will--a power, an act, or a habit?
   (3) If it is a power, is it appetitive or cognitive?
   (4) If it is appetitive, is it the same power as the will, or distinct?
   FIRST ARTICLE [I, Q. 83, Art. 1]

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