According to my “calculated” efforts, I imagine that the mind has to be a certain degree holographic to connect such things in the myriad ways required.
Therefore, each person has a perception of the present based on the past, the person’s DNA and other (both nature and nurture) factors, and their past, creates the current state of mind. When mixed with incoming information from senses, it creates the unique awareness and tendencies toward which a soul is motivated. This soul, like the Church itself, has a free will choice to hold bound or loose its own memories and perception, according to whatever standards exist in that one’s perception.
In other words, in my imaginary world based on my interpretation of scriptures, everybody gets to have their own vision as they do now, but each person will spontaneously “assimilate” into the groupthink that everything is basically OK. Things have to be not “perfect” or we have no reason to exist to do anything, for doing things is to change things. However, we can each in our own way process our past and present (and future, if you include imagination in the mix) such that we judge not – not necessarily by balancing good and evil but refusing to apply personal standards other than as good information help point to the next step on the path to perfection.
Again, everybody gets to have an individual look at the same reality, but comes to the same conclusion (we are all ok) based on connecting, assembling, or processing their own images, metaphors, and life experiences. It is the commonalities we share and the differences we exhibit that keep life relationship often on cycles.
To me, therefore, the objective standard the Church uses for what constitutes grave matter (I think of “grave” as serious, dead, peaceful, predictable, and “matter” as material or something that matters to me) is offset by the subjectively applicable standards on intent. If a soul knows its intent, then it – or God if the soul doesn’t – then for it the intent is objective while the connection of that soul to the physical world would seem to need to be subjective. Either way, from the point of view of the Church, a person’s mind, or a person’s soul, it seems there would be both an objective and a subjective component.
Alan