P
pnewton
Guest
Okay, I will dismiss them in hand. First, he refers to the questions as “simple yes or no,” when grammatically, they are not. This is quite obvious by the fact they are lengthy with extra notes. There is nothing simple about them and they contain many stipulation, most of which is doctrine, but maybe not all. So, like the question about stop beating your wife, if the question itself contains and implied or stated condition that may or may not be true.This example question has already been answered by the philosopher (and practicing Catholic) Edward Feser on his blog:
edwardfeser.blogspot.fr/2016/12/denial-flows-into-tiber.html
To quote his response to your example:
The blog posting above explains some of the rationale behind the call for a response to the Five Dubia. It is a somewhat lengthy posting (hence I’ve not copied it all here), but contains some reasonable arguments which we shouldn’t dismiss out of hand.
I do not care if he is a community college professor, there is nothing authoritative in what he writes. The problem with posting blogs and opinions of others is that they are not here to engage in discussions. It has always struck me as problematic, unless there is some expertise or authority being exercised.
Of course, there can be more that just a yes or no, or no answer. The clamor about the yes or no formulation are not from those that have defended the Holy Father, but others like this very blogger who want an answer for these “simple” questions.
Would it quieten down the issue if the Pope simply said “no” to the question that he thinks needs a no, and when pushed, just said the nature of the question allowed it? I would not think it would be satisfactory.