A
Arandur
Guest
Who do you think you’re arguing with? What do you pretend is our disagreement with what Benedict said (as Ratzinger)?To Arandur and Michaelo,
Pope Benedict XVI
It is this “astonishing conclusion” that does not follow, and is where Monod errs and goes beyond science, making a philosophical statement. This statement is the trespass of science beyond its limits into philosophy and theology that Pope Leo XII and the Catechism speak about, as I quoted you above.Monod nonetheless finds the possibility for evolution in the fact that in the very propagation of the project there can be mistakes in the act of transmission. Because nature is conservative, these mistakes, once having come into existence, are carried on. Such mistakes can add up, and from the adding up of mistakes something new can arise. Now an astonishing conclusion follows:** It was in this way that the whole world of living creatures, and human beings themselves, came into existence. We are the product of “haphazard mistakes.” **
Here we have Benedict speaking of the very limits of science and the purview of science that Michaelo and I have been explaining all along. And these limits of science and the subject matter of science that we’ve been talking about are the mainstream view of science.What response shall we make to this view? It is the affair of the natural sciences to explain how the tree of life in particular continues to grow and how new branches shoot out from it. This is not a matter for faith.
Again, wholly consistent with everything we’ve said. Even mutation obeys God’s physical and chemical laws; nothing is truly “random” as it is determined by the interaction of these natural forces and processes. Further, God knows all these variables and all these laws and created them purposely with intention.But we must have the audacity to say that the great projects of the living creation are not the products of chance and error.
Again, wholly consistent with what we’ve said. Where do you think we disagree?Nor are they the products of a selective process to which divine predicates can be attributed in illogical, unscientific, and even mythic fashion. The great projects of the living creation point to a creating Reason and show us a creating Intelligence, and they do so more luminously and radiantly today than ever before. Thus we can say today with a new certitude and joyousness that the human being is indeed a divine project, which only the creating Intelligence was strong and great and audacious enough to conceive of. Human beings are not a mistake but something willed; they are the fruit of love. They can disclose in themselves, in the bold project that they are, the language of the creating Intelligence that speaks to them and that moves them to say: Yes, Father, you have willed me.
Consider also this, from the same reference:
"All of this is well and good, one might say, but is it not ultimately disproved by our scientific knowledge of how the human being evolved from the animal kingdom? Now, more reflective spirits have long been aware that there is no either-or here. We cannot say: creation or evolution, inasmuch as these two things respond to two different realities. The story of the dust of the earth and the breath of God, which we just heard, does not in fact explain how human persons come to be but rather what they are. It explains their inmost origin and casts light on the project that they are. And, vice versa, the theory of evolution seeks to understand and describe biological developments. But in so doing it cannot explain where the “project” of human persons comes from, nor their inner origin, nor their particular nature. To that extent we are faced here with two complementary – rather than mutually exclusive – realities.
But let us look a little closer, because here, too, the progress of thought in the last two decades helps us to grasp anew the inner unity of creation and evolution and of faith and reason. It was a particular characteristic of the 19th century to appreciate the historicity of all things and the fact that they came into existence. It perceived that things that we used to consider as unchanging and immutable were the product of a long process of becoming. This was true not only in the realm of the human but also in that of nature. It became evident that the universe was not something like a huge box into which everything was put in a finished state, but that it was comparable instead to a living, growing tree that gradually lifts its branches higher and higher to the sky. **This common view **was and is frequently interpreted in bizarre fashion, but as research advances it is becoming clearer how it is to be correctly understood."
Again, absolutely consistent with what we’ve been telling you all along. Evolution is compatible with the faith–get over it!
Once again, your problem is with Scientism, Existentialism, Positivism, and every other materialist philosophy that tries to justify itself by appealing to evolution. Evolution itself, as a limited natural empirical science, claims nothing in conflict with the faith; it makes no judgments about purposeness or purposelessness, intention or unintention. It only describes a process.
Now, again, what do you think of all the references to Catholic sources that I mentioned above? Do you disagree with my interpretations, or the numbered points that I think I’ve conclusively shown?