V
vames
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The Church teaches the unity body-spirit, saying “the human person is a being at once corporeal and spiritual” (CCC 362) and that “Conscience is a judgment of reason whereby the human person recognizes the moral quality of a concrete act that he is going to perform, is in the process of performing, or has already completed” (CCC 1778). I don’t think the Church says that reason doesn’t anything to do with the functioning of the brain (otherwise the unity body-spirit wouldn’t exist) or that conscience can’t evolve (otherwise it would be absurd to distinguish between informed and uninformed conscience, the notion of “age of reason” wouldn’t exist and the Church wouldn’t say that young people under 16 aren’t liable to her penal sanctions).Sometime back I thought I recognized Cartesian [extreme] dualism. The beginning of this post is a great modern example or rather it is a great example of the Cartesian legacy which eventually led to communism and the denial of spiritual soul.
No wonder so many people are confused about Adam.,…when they are confused about conscience and perfection and intellective rational tools.
Before Adam and Eve eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, there was no experience of evil, pain, death in their life. Everything was good in Eden. The serpent said: “For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil”. And this was the outcome: “Then the Lord God said, ‘See, the man* has become like one of us, knowing good and evil*; and now, he might reach out his hand and take also from the tree of life, and eat, and live forever’— therefore the Lord God sent him forth from the garden of Eden, to till the ground from which he was taken”. If this isn’t learning what is right and what is wrong, then what is it?I never realized that people would separate conscience from God’s creative act in giving Adam, and subsequently Adam’s descendants, a rational spiritual soul. I should have known that “silliness” based on the fact that many, not all, Catholics consider Adam as some kind of half-human waiting to learn what is right and what is wrong – waiting to eat organic fruit with magical properties.