W
WillieWonka
Guest
See, you are relying on this to prove something to us… not sure what, but the document goes on to say: (1) supposing a belated animation, there is still nothing less than a human life, preparing for and calling for a soul in which the nature received from parents is completed, (2) on the other hand, **it suffices that this presence of the soul be probable… in order that the taking of life involve accepting the risk of killing a man, **not only waiting for, but already in possession of his soul.
So the document is saying 1. that we do not know and science cannot tell us when the baby is ensouled; and 2. that we do know that there is a good chance that there is a soul already and that therefore abortion is running the very high risk of killing a body which has a soul.
I would also like to point out that science has moved along since the time of Sts Aquinas and Augustine, and even this document. We now *know *that the unborn child is alive from the moment of conception; that the child is human, and that the child is individual. And we know all this from science. So from a *scientific *point of view, the act of abortion takes a human life.
And from the Church’s point of view, abortion is and always has been condemned as an intrinsically evil act, preceding even these speculations about ensoulment, which means that this is an argument with no merit whatsoever.
- I am demonstrating that the Church does not teach with certainty that ensoulment takes place at conception. Many people state the Church does teach this with certainty. They are mistaken. It is therefore acceptable for a Catholic to believe ensoulment takes place at any time during gestation. If this belief is acceptable for a Catholic, then it is certainly acceptable for anyone else.
- In 1974 everyone knew the fertilized egg was alive. Nobody doubted it. Nobody denied it. That wasn’t a recent discovery.
- Science does indeed tell us the fertiized egg is of the human species, just as it tells us another fertilized egg is of the feline species. That’s all it can tell us. It says nothing about a soul.
- I’d say accurate knowledge of Church teaching does indeed have merit.