R
redhen
Guest
Bonnette is a philosopher, not an ethologist. His ideological bias is front and center;Excellent links! I highly recommend Dr. Bonnette’s work, also.
“Materialist explanations of animal and human behavior miss the crucial distinction between sense and intellect. Animals possess sense knowledge alone, whereas man possesses both sense and intellective knowledge. Intellective knowledge is the hallmark of the human spiritual soul, and is not shared with our animal friends”
drbonnette.com/Ape-Language_Studies_Part_I.html
Special pleading (immortal soul). True enough, we can never crawl inside a chimps brain to see what it subjectively knows and feels (Nagel’s “What’s it like to be a bat?” comes to mind). Still, what is more plausible, evolutionary psychology or God imparting an immortal soul to homo sapiens sapiens? amazon.com/Primates-Philosophers-Morality-Evolved-Princeton/dp/0691124477
Thanks for making me look up Morgan’s Canon, never heard of it before. It seems like an extension of Occam’s Razor. Which again refers me to the best explanation.
Anyways, let’s leave our ape cousins for the moment; what is the current Catholic theological status of the ensoulment of archaic hominids? I’m thinking about Neanderthal, which went extinct c. 24,000 ya, Homo floresiensis, which went extinct c. 13,000 ya. Both species made and used tools and more importantly fire.
Did God give these rational hominids immortal souls? It would be especially egregious if Neanderthal were denied this boon, since there is good evidence for grave burials with goods placed in them which strongly hints at a concept of an afterlife.
p.s. another new potential hominid was recently discovered in Siberia, which lived 30,000 ya. spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,685630,00.html
How many more extinct hominids that lived during the same time as our species have to be discovered before we can posit that homo sapiens sapiens is not the pinnacle of the material universe?