How do you figure the Catholic Church uses objective thinking? You said earlier that “so many people think subjectively.” Does the Church weed out subjective thinkers?
There are some good comments in your post 142. However, I will address the question "Does the Church weed out subjective thinkers? The answer is not necessarily because humans can think both subjectively and objectively. What the Catholic Church does is to base its doctrines on objective truths.
Practically speaking, objective thinking and subjective thinking are not a mutually exclusive either-or. This simply means that both can be used and often are.
Subjective refers to something taking place within a person’s mind rather than in the external world. Subjective thinking can utilize one’s emotions and/or previous experiences as a source of information. Operating by gut instinct is another description. Objective thinking uses external information from an independent existing source. Another view is that subjective thinkers relate back to their own personal likes and dislikes, etc. An objective thinker bases his likes and dislikes on the facts surrounding the real object.
One can be objective when buying a new car and subjective when deciding the car’s color. Fortunately, human nature’s intellect and will are part of the process which sorts out information and chooses how it should be used.
As far as Catholicism. Divine Revelation is external to our minds and feelings. Granted we take into our minds Divine Relation and act upon it; but Divine Revelation itself cannot be influenced by one’s subjective emotions or personal prejudices. The Church does not interpret and thus guard Divine Revelation by looking for people’s reactions. It focuses on the external reality of the objective Gospel message and the actions of Jesus Christ.
When it comes to determining what is a moral action, one should be able to spot the pitfalls of subjective thinking. Moral relativism is what it implies. In other words, it is related back to the person’s own personal mental conception of good and evil without anything external or separate from her or his wishes which can act as a guide.
In real life, many people do have similar mental conceptions of good and evil and thus philosophies like humanism and utilitarianism, etc. do come about. While parts of these philosophies do produce good, the problem arises when one side of the street acts one way to achieve the common good and the other side sees a different common good and acts in opposition.
Blessings,
granny
Isaiah 55: 6-9