Strong statements of
freedom of choice <in the medieval canon law> were
qualified by other canonical principles and other rules of law, it remains
true that the statements were there <in the jurisprudence>. Some of them did
not have to await more recent times before they produced more sophisticated
thought . . . that would augment freedom of choice for the men and women of
the world.
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Helmholz, Richard H. The Spirit of Classical Canon Law (The Spirit of the Laws. Athens-London: University of Georgia Press, 1996) 252 |