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I have posted elsewhere about how cognitive neuroscience has gone a long way toward proving that our consciousness is a property of our physical brains. I don’t want to argue about this thesis, but want to use it for a new thesis below.
I’ve also posted that the pro-life movement doesn’t use good science, but leans on poor theories. For example, the fetal pain hypothesis is almost totally undercut by most science journals’ articles about that stuff.
I will say that arguing about biology of consciousness is capturing the pro-life movement in the biological thesis used by many advocates for abortion: that the conceptus/embryo/fetus is just a “ball of cells.” That is, a physical thing lacking humanity, similar to a cluster of cells found in a petri dish.
Fundamentally, the reason that as Catholics we say that abortion is murder is that during conception, a new soul is also created. That new soul doesn’t have genes, it doesn’t have consciousness, it doesn’t have arms, heartbeat, or senses. And it never will: the soul is NOT the body, and its properties are spiritual, not physical. We will never measure a soul, because we can’t measure anything that’s simply spiritual.
However, if you believe that there is a soul, that itself has normative impact on your ethics. It’s not wrong to shoot a 16 year old in the head because their brain shuts down or their heart stops. It’s wrong because it rips a soul from a body. That’s why it’s wrong to kill someone in a permanent vegetative state. It’s not because their soul is conscious, it’s because their soul is still in their body.
To me, that’s the point that we should use in discussing the moral theology associated with abortion. Abortion isn’t wrong because being human is equal to being conscious. It’s wrong because being human is about being both body and soul, united.
There are many people who claim to be simply “spiritual, but not religious.” There are many Christians who dance around moral theology to allow themselves to sin. But for those people, asking them if they have a soul and what it is may also open the door to the issue about abortion. If you have a soul, and it’s wrong to kill you, isn’t it also wrong to kill a “conceptus/embryo/fetus”? If they reply with a biological issue, like saying that there’s no conscious, tell them they’re just saying that a soul is a product of biology. Fundamentally, it’s not. Confusing the two is exceptionally problematic, and it’s easy to get captured by that.
Everyone wants to believe that our loved ones are happily enjoying the afterlife, and after purgation, they are. But it’s not as full-fledged human persons. That has to wait. The Catechism says that it’s with “intuitive vision” that the soul enjoys the Beatific Vision… that’s not with eyes, ears, and senses.
If we think that our souls are where our consciousness is, then we think that science has killed the soul. It has not. I used to be afraid to look at what science tells us about consciousness, but that was before I studied the Bible and Catechism. To a Christian, our ultimate hope is not in Heaven, but in the New Creation on the Last Day, when our bodies are resurrected and reunited with our souls (i.e., 1 Corinthians 15, Romans 8). When we say the Nicene Creed in mass, and say that we believe in the resurrection of the dead, we’re not talking about Heaven, but in the physical resurrection of our bodies on the Last Day, reunited with a divinized soul. If free from mortal sin, our souls go to Heaven, but only as a stopover point on the way to our resurrection on the Last Day.
I’ve also posted that the pro-life movement doesn’t use good science, but leans on poor theories. For example, the fetal pain hypothesis is almost totally undercut by most science journals’ articles about that stuff.
I will say that arguing about biology of consciousness is capturing the pro-life movement in the biological thesis used by many advocates for abortion: that the conceptus/embryo/fetus is just a “ball of cells.” That is, a physical thing lacking humanity, similar to a cluster of cells found in a petri dish.
Fundamentally, the reason that as Catholics we say that abortion is murder is that during conception, a new soul is also created. That new soul doesn’t have genes, it doesn’t have consciousness, it doesn’t have arms, heartbeat, or senses. And it never will: the soul is NOT the body, and its properties are spiritual, not physical. We will never measure a soul, because we can’t measure anything that’s simply spiritual.
However, if you believe that there is a soul, that itself has normative impact on your ethics. It’s not wrong to shoot a 16 year old in the head because their brain shuts down or their heart stops. It’s wrong because it rips a soul from a body. That’s why it’s wrong to kill someone in a permanent vegetative state. It’s not because their soul is conscious, it’s because their soul is still in their body.
To me, that’s the point that we should use in discussing the moral theology associated with abortion. Abortion isn’t wrong because being human is equal to being conscious. It’s wrong because being human is about being both body and soul, united.
There are many people who claim to be simply “spiritual, but not religious.” There are many Christians who dance around moral theology to allow themselves to sin. But for those people, asking them if they have a soul and what it is may also open the door to the issue about abortion. If you have a soul, and it’s wrong to kill you, isn’t it also wrong to kill a “conceptus/embryo/fetus”? If they reply with a biological issue, like saying that there’s no conscious, tell them they’re just saying that a soul is a product of biology. Fundamentally, it’s not. Confusing the two is exceptionally problematic, and it’s easy to get captured by that.
Everyone wants to believe that our loved ones are happily enjoying the afterlife, and after purgation, they are. But it’s not as full-fledged human persons. That has to wait. The Catechism says that it’s with “intuitive vision” that the soul enjoys the Beatific Vision… that’s not with eyes, ears, and senses.
If we think that our souls are where our consciousness is, then we think that science has killed the soul. It has not. I used to be afraid to look at what science tells us about consciousness, but that was before I studied the Bible and Catechism. To a Christian, our ultimate hope is not in Heaven, but in the New Creation on the Last Day, when our bodies are resurrected and reunited with our souls (i.e., 1 Corinthians 15, Romans 8). When we say the Nicene Creed in mass, and say that we believe in the resurrection of the dead, we’re not talking about Heaven, but in the physical resurrection of our bodies on the Last Day, reunited with a divinized soul. If free from mortal sin, our souls go to Heaven, but only as a stopover point on the way to our resurrection on the Last Day.