G
Geremia
Guest
Defending reason, in 2005 against neo-DarwinismNew York Times and an in-depth follow-up in First Things. Fr. Coyne, then head of the Vatican Observatory, wrote a critical response to Cardinal Schönborn in The Tablet and on Catholic Online. Could someone please clarify how Cardinal Schönborn’s and Fr. Coyne’s views differ?
They appear to revolve around a misconception of what exactly neo-Darwinism is; I would define it as a deterministic, positivistic, naturalistic, mechanistic, anti-teleologic, and applicable not just to biology but also to the other empiriological sciences, not necessarily beneficially, though. Also, I would say that—while Fr. Coyne and Cardinal Schönborn are definitely both anti-materialism, anti-New Earth Creationism, and anti-“intelligent design,” despite what Fr. Coyne says in his articleCatholic Online—only Cardinal Schönborn appears to be explicitly anti-positivism. He says in his First Things article “The Designs of Science”:
They appear to revolve around a misconception of what exactly neo-Darwinism is; I would define it as a deterministic, positivistic, naturalistic, mechanistic, anti-teleologic, and applicable not just to biology but also to the other empiriological sciences, not necessarily beneficially, though. Also, I would say that—while Fr. Coyne and Cardinal Schönborn are definitely both anti-materialism, anti-New Earth Creationism, and anti-“intelligent design,” despite what Fr. Coyne says in his articleCatholic Online—only Cardinal Schönborn appears to be explicitly anti-positivism. He says in his First Things article “The Designs of Science”:
[T]he overwhelming trend of Catholic commentators on the question of neo-Darwinian evolution …] gladly discuss[es] its compatibility with the truths of faith but seldom bother to discuss whether and how it is compatible with the truths of reason.
…]
Let us return to the heart of the problem: positivism. Modern science first excludes a priori final and formal causes, then investigates nature under the reductive mode of mechanism (efficient and material causes), and then turns around to claim both final and formal causes are obviously unreal, and also that its mode of knowing the corporeal world takes priority over all other forms of human knowledge. Being mechanistic, modern science is also historicist: It argues that a complete description of the efficient and material causal history of an entity is a complete explanation of the entity itself—in other words, that an understanding of how something came to be is the same as understanding what it is. But Catholic thinking rejects the genetic fallacy applied to the natural world and contains instead a holistic understanding of reality based on all the faculties of reason and all the causes evident in nature—including the “vertical” causation of formality and finality.