Spock,
No doubt. Of course “claims” are dime a dozen.
I know it appears that way. If we were honestly convinced that we did have the truth, the only point I am trying to make is that it would be rational for us to act accordingly. In reality, the only reason someone would promote a “free marketplace” of “competing truths” is if you were operating under the presupposition that there is no objective truth, or that if there is, that its discovery is not critically important for mankind. I just think it is important for both of us to recognize the hidden premises in our respective positions.
Yes, it was inaccurate, and that was my fault. It should have said: “stifling the free dissemination of thoughts”. Fortunately 1984 is just a novel, we do not have the wherewithal to monitor thought processes. But in your post and the quotation you made it clear that the church is against the free marketplace of ideas, and that is what I find insidious.
Doubting and expessing that doubt is hardly equivalent to crying “fire” in a crowded theater.
Ah, but my question regarding freedom comes into play. No one honestly holds to a complete and utter doctrine of the free dissemination of thoughts. Should I be allowed to preach a return to racially-based slavery? or advocate the killing of everyone who considers themselves homosexual? No. Even in todays “free marketplace of thoughts” there are limits…hence it is not totally free as you would seem to define it. Why do would forbid the dissemination of some thoughts? Because we view them as intrinsically harmful to the person who hears them, and those who might be unwilling victims of that influence.
The Catholic Church has never condemned simple doubt. The material that she has forbidden in the past as to do with teachings she thinks are intrinsically harmful to mankind and her action is taken with a mind to protect innocent people from the bad influence of these thoughts. Yelling “Fire!” in a crowded theater is against the law because it might create a reaction resulting in the loss of someone’s like, but some of the thoughts out in the free marketplace not only have the threat of destroying the body, but also the soul. Now, clearly you would not agree with the Church on this matter, but operating from the position that man does in fact have an immortal soul, which is directly affected by his moral decisions, is not the Church’s position completely rational?
Yes we are. We are much better off. The free marketplace of ideas, the free dissemination of what one considers “truth” helps everyone. Only those people are scared of the free marketplace, whose ideas cannot stand the light of reason, whose ideas must be upheld by transcendental threats and rewards. Also you are wrong is assuming that the Enlightment was responsible for “creating” the countless groups introducing the divergent ideas. The opposing ideas were there, all right, and people conducted wars over them.
I never suggested that the Enlightenment was responsible for the divergent positions, only for their co-existence in a “free marketplace”, which in turn was really a result of the 30-Years War in Europe between Protestants and Catholics. There have been heresies within the Catholic Church, though, since the First Century.
As for being better off in the free marketplace, again, one would only say that if they pre-supposed that the truth had not already been found. Once you know that 2+2=4, what benefit is there to have a majority of people disagree with that truth and try to convince you otherwise? Yes, you could claim that having to defend your position would only make you stronger, but what of those who are by nature intellectually weaker? Surely many would be swayed by the crowd into disbelieveing in basic Math. Indeed, some of the truths questioned today are those which would be considered self-evident first principles. Questioning those could serve no purpose at all, especially since there is no way to rationally convince someone of their truth because they are prior to rational demonstration.
The marketplace tends to only weaken one’s grasp on the truth and even encourages the view that there is no truth, and no one is better off from that.