| Editorial Notes | p. xiii |
| Introduction | p. xv |
| Continence | |
| Is continence a virtue? | p. 3 |
| What is it about? | p. 7 |
| Where is it seated? | p. 11 |
| How does it compare with other virtues? | p. 15 |
| Incontinence | |
| Is incontinence of soul or of body? | p. 19 |
| Is it a sin? | p. 23 |
| How does it compare with intemperance? | p. 25 |
| Which is more disgraceful, incontinence in anger or in lust? | p. 31 |
| Clemency and Gentleness | |
| Are clemency and gentleness identical? | p. 35 |
| Is each a virtue? | p. 39 |
| And part of temperance? | p. 41 |
| How do they compare with other virtues? | p. 45 |
| Wrath | |
| Is it lawful to be angry? | p. 51 |
| Is wrath a sin? | p. 55 |
| And a grave sin? | p. 59 |
| And the worst of sins? | p. 61 |
| On the types of anger | p. 65 |
| Is wrath a capital sin? | p. 69 |
| On the sins it breeds | p. 71 |
| Is it a fault to be lacking in anger? | p. 73 |
| Cruelty | |
| Is cruelty the contrary of clemency? | p. 77 |
| How does it compare with ferocity and savagery? | p. 79 |
| Modesty | |
| Is modesty a part of temperance? | p. 83 |
| What is it about? | p. 85 |
| Humility | |
| Is humility a virtue? | p. 89 |
| Is it a matter of how we feel or how we think? | p. 93 |
| Should one submit oneself to everybody out of humility? | p. 97 |
| Is it a part of temperance and modesty? | p. 101 |
| How does it compare with other virtues? | p. 105 |
| On the steps of humility | p. 109 |
| Pride | |
| Is pride a sin? | p. 117 |
| And a special sort of sin? | p. 121 |
| Where is it seated? | p. 125 |
| Of its various kinds | p. 129 |
| Is it mortal sin? | p. 135 |
| And the gravest of sins? | p. 137 |
| On how it relates to other sins | p. 143 |
| Should it be reckoned a capital sin? | p. 145 |
| The First Sin | |
| Was pride the first human sin? | p. 149 |
| What did man seek in sinning? | p. 153 |
| Was the first sin more grievous than later sins? | p. 157 |
| Which sin was worse, the man's or the woman's? | p. 159 |
| Penalties of the First Sin | |
| Was death the common punishment? | p. 165 |
| On other particular pains set down in Genesis | p. 173 |
| The First Temptation | |
| Was it fitting for man to be tempted by the devil? | p. 183 |
| On the manner and sequence of the temptation | p. 185 |
| Devotion to Learning | |
| Is studiousness engaged with knowing exactly? | p. 193 |
| Is it a function of temperance? | p. 195 |
| Inquisitiveness | |
| Can intellectual knowledge admit the vice of curiosity? | p. 201 |
| Can sense-knowledge? | p. 205 |
| Good Manners | |
| Can there be virtue or vice in our outward motions? | p. 211 |
| And in our conduct in play? | p. 215 |
| Of the sin of playing too much | p. 221 |
| And of playing too little | p. 225 |
| Style | |
| Can there be virtue or vice in how we dress? | p. 229 |
| Can women sin gravely in how they adorn themselves? | p. 235 |
| Precepts of Temperance | |
| The commandments in relation to temperance itself | p. 241 |
| And to its associated virtues | p. 243 |
| Glossary | p. 248 |
| Index | p. 251 |
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