A
Annie
Guest
Well, if I were making something into which I was going to breathe life, I’d include nostrils too.
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Now one thing to consider is that at the time Pope Pius XII wrote Humani Generis, the theory of evolution in regards to human evolution was that humans started appearing all over the world at about the same time. So whereas modern science would say there was a population in Africa that went on to spread through the world, back then it was held that a population emerged in Europe, not related to the population that emerged in Asia, which was not related to the population that emerged in Australia, which was not related to the population emerging in the Americas, ect.
- When, however, there is question of another conjectural opinion, namely polygenism, the children of the Church by no means enjoy such liberty. For the faithful cannot embrace that opinion which maintains that either after Adam there existed on this earth true men who did not take their origin through natural generation from him as from the first parent of all, or that Adam represents a certain number of first parents. Now it is in no way apparent how such an opinion can be reconciled with that which the sources of revealed truth and the documents of the Teaching Authority of the Church propose with regard to original sin, which proceeds from a sin actually committed by an individual Adam and which, through generation, is passed on to all and is in everyone as his own.[12]
Some Catholic theologians and lay faithful take this papal statement as definitive magisterial teaching that affirms the historical existence of an original couple from whom all human beings are descended. To put it another way, they think that this encyclical definitively rules out polygenism, which is the theological theory that human beings are descended from several original first couples. The theological theory that human beings are descended from a single original couple is called monogenism.
However, these same theologians and lay faithful often fail to consider the rest of the paragraph in the same encyclical where Pope Pius XII explains his reasoning for his conclusion that polygenism cannot be embraced by the Catholic Christian. The Holy Father taught:
Now it is in no way apparent how such an opinion [of polygenism] can be reconciled with that which the sources of revealed truth and the documents of the Teaching Authority of the Church propose with regard to original sin, which proceeds from a sin actually committed by an individual Adam and which, through generation, is passed on to all and is in everyone as his own.
In other words, at face value, Pope Pius XII ruled out polygenism because he could not imagine how an account of several original first couples could be reconciled with the Church’s teaching on original sin. As we will discuss in the essays that follow, this is not surprising because scientists in 1950 believed that the human race was descended from several original first non-human couples who were scattered throughout the planet.
As we will also see, scientists today now think that our species is descended from several first human couples living in the same geographical area. Therefore, in the fourth essay on the historicity of Adam and Eve, I will propose that this contemporary scientific account on human origins can be reconciled with the Church’s teaching on original sin. Thus, I will argue that an account of polygenism that is in accord with everything that we know and believe about original sin remains true to the magisterial statement of Pope Pius XII in Humani generis.
If “true men” have human souls, directly created by God, then science has little to say about the number of true men in existence. All science can give is estimates of the numbers of Homo sapiens, which presumably puts an upper limit on the number of “true men”.after Adam there existed on this earth true men who did not take their origin … from him… (emphasis added)
I mostly agree with this, but there is something more going on. Your graphic largely describes the propagation of a trait by reproduction. I am not sure that is the only means for a rational soul.In that image, each one on the bottom row can trace genetic lineage to multiple people, but the soul is only traced back to two.
Umm, no. Your assuming that the other ancestors of the MRCA just died off leaving only the descendants of Adam and Eve.As long as Adam and Eve were ancestors of the MRCA then all living humans are descended from them.
I am assuming no such thing because I am allowing for intermarriage. Take Adam’s great aunt. Her great-great-great-granddaughter could have married Adam and Eve’s great-grandson, and their children would all be able to trace descent to Adam and Eve through their father.Your assuming that the other ancestors of the MRCA just died off leaving only the descendants of Adam and Eve.
Are you and your cousins on your mother’s side all descended from the same two grandparents?Gorgias:![]()
I have to disagree with your meanings of polygenism.No. The Catholic meaning of ‘polygenism’ is a theological notion, and it speaks to the question of ensouled human beings. The Wikipedia version (i.e., the scientific one) speaks to the question of hominins, without reference to souls. Apples and oranges
The Catholic meaning is based on the assertion that everyone alive today came from Adam - which is to imply Eve in the genesis as well. Genetics has proven that assertion to be wrong.
The “scientific”, as you call it, meaning of polygenism is outright quackery, according to Wikipedia definition, because evolution and a Catholic, or general, meaning of polygenism has been accepted as fact by all but fundamental Christians. There is no discussion of it not being true in science, just as there is no longer discussion of a flat earth…the term flat earther is one of quackery.
No. That’s what the definition of “Y-Chromosome Adam” is.The Catholic meaning is based on the assertion that everyone alive today came from Adam
That would be “Mitochondrial Eve.”
- which is to imply Eve in the genesis as well.
No. Genetics can’t tell us when hominins (living beings with human bodies) first became humans (i.e., hominins with souls).Genetics has proven that assertion to be wrong.
Close. Y-MRCA and mt-MRCA are the MRCA’s for all humans alive today. All humans alive today are descended from these two.No it has not. Genetics shows that there is a MRCA (Most Recent Common Ancestor) for all humans. All humans are descended from that MRCA.
Intuitively, that seems ‘off’. If there’s divergence upstream from the MCRA, wouldn’t that mean that Adam and Eve, by definition, aren’t ancestors of all?As long as Adam and Eve were ancestors of the MRCA then all living humans are descended from them.
There isn’t one. The Church teaches monogenesis: we are all descended from a first pair of human (i.e., ensouled) beings.I have never heard of a Catholic ttheory of poly genesis.
Then why is there any discussion at all among Catholics about polygenism and evolution? It’s because there is no way to square the story in Genesis with what had been proven through genetics - that being, there was no single pair of MRCA’s that begot the rest humanity. Remember, Adam and Eve are a couple, singular, the opposite of the prefix poly.If you believe that the Genesis story tells us that there were only two first hominins , then yeah, you’re right – genetics has pretty effectively shown that this is not the case.