B
Betterave
Guest
I’m not sure why you think this is a difficult case. When the physical split occurs, there are produced two non-identical bodies. (We *call *them ‘identical’ only because they are very similar.) One would retain the already existing spiritual soul, the other would have a spiritual soul conferred on it by God as in normal cases of conception. Why should there be any kind of difficulty in principle here?The Catholic teaching (if I am not mistaken) is that the soul is “implanted” when conception occurs. Now consider maternal twins. At the beginning there is one “body” (a few cells, but still) - and of course one “soul”. Shortly afterwards, a physical split occurs and then there will be two (identical) “bodies”. What happens to the soul? Will one body be soulless? If so, which one? Will the two bodies “share” the soul? Will the “original” soul be kept by one, and brand new soul installed in the other one? Will the “original” soul “disappear” and two brand new souls installed at the time of the split? And please, don’t delude yourself that these are hard questions, best left to the Magistretium to answer. These questions show that the Catholic teaching (soul implanted at conception) is sheer nonsense, the concept of soul is meaningless.
It depends where you’re looking. What you fail to see may still exist and there are many possible explanations for your failure to see. I think you should try to be much less dogmatic about it - your dogmatism might be one of the causes of your blindness (supposing that’s what it is, of course).Unfortunately, when it comes God’s benevolence, we reach a fundamental difference. Of all the alleged attributes of God, the benevolence is the hardest one to swallow. If you look at the world as is, without the pink glasses of Catholicism, you will see a stark picture without divine love. The actual evidence shows indifference, if not worse.