Actually, that’s of little interest. I don’t need their help to know the scope or mandate of science.
Fair enough. But I think it would be better if you were interested in the topic enough to actually read what evolutionary biologists think about their own field of study. Admittedly, I find almost everything those scientists say to be entirely wrong and often hateful of God. Scientists comprise what we call the scientific community. It is from there that various definitions about what science can and should do will come - not from the Church.
Science seeks to discover what can be known in the material world. Put aside the likes of Dawkins - I think you allow the “media scientists” to poison your attitude to science itself.
You’ve given science some rules here that you want or expect it to follow. That’s fine except that the scientists I mentioned don’t want to follow your rules. They might rightly say that the definition of science is not an absolute. We would agree – at one time theology was considered a science.
What aspect of a human-like body do you suspect might rely on the human soul and how would you like science to deal with this?
It is through the human soul that we possess consciousness, rationality, will and a moral sensibility. A supposed ancestor of a human being may either have these qualities or not. But if science cannot determine this, then science cannot determine when the first humans appeared on earth.
You can’t merely look at fossils and determine that a human soul was present in that organism.
What science does is clam that “head size” among other physical characteristics will tell us that a human being was present or not.
You seem to want to defend evolution so that’s your challenge: How does evolution explain the emergence of the first humans from non-human ancestors. What changes took place for the descendents of non-humans to be considered human? Clearly, an immortal soul must necessarily be present in humans - how would science know this?
At one point, there were no humans on earth. Then at another point, there were the non-human ancestors of humans. Did those ancestors have immortal souls - with rationality and will and consciousness?
Evolutionists are telling us they know the answer to this. They attempt to pin-point when the first humans appeared on earth.
Consciousness for them (Daniel Dennett, Stephen Pinker - and virtually all evolutionary biologists) emerged gradually from non-rational organisms through mutations and natural selection that created consciousness and rationality.
We (you and I) have called this the presence of the Divine Image in humans.
Scientists call it the physical emergence of consciousness from mutations in DNA.
Both of those viewpoints cannot simultaneously be correct.
How do I think science should handle it?
Scientists should all be Catholic - because Catholicism is the true religion as given by God. From there scientists would realize that God created (and creates) human beings via the direct creation of the soul which is infused at conception.
What would science say then, if all scientists were Catholic?
It would say "since we cannot possibly know by scientific means when the first humans appeared on earth - the Biblical story of Adam and Eve is perfectly valid scientifically. There may have been human-like animals on earth for millions of years, but lacking an immortal soul. But then God created Adam and Eve - just as the Bible states.
Do you wish to denigrate science on account of its limitations or value it on account of its achievements?
I would value it because of achievements but also denigrate false scientific theories which are upheld as if they are true.
Science is not a failure for so long as it fails to proclaim these same ideas.
Just because neo-Darwinian theory is false does not mean that science is a failure. We have to be willing to admit that some theories simply don’t work. There is nothing wrong with scientists admitting that they don’t know the origin of human life or the origin of the universe - or many other things that only God knows.