Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Faith, Science & Policy

Most of the important questions around public policy involve an understanding of the human being’s place in the world, and the answers to those questions cannot be found in science, as Pope Benedict XVI clarifies:

POPE-IDENTITY Jan-28-2008
Pope says science can't help people discover their true identity
By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service


VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- While the sciences may help people live better in many ways, there is no way they can ever help people discover who they really are, Pope Benedict XVI said.

"No science can say who man is, where he came from or where he is going," the pope said Jan. 28 in a speech to participants in a conference sponsored by the Pontifical Academy of Sciences and the French Academy of Sciences.

The academies were discussing changing notions of human identity, a subject the pope said is inextricably tied to the question of human dignity "from the embryonic stage to natural death."

Human identity cannot be defined simply by looking at a person, studying his physical and intellectual abilities or by summarizing his experiences, the pope said.

The human person, he said, is a mystery "marked by otherness: a being created by God, a being in the image of God, a being that is loved and was made to love."

The ability to distinguish right from wrong and the freedom to act on those decisions makes the human person different from any other being, the pope said.

"In exercising his authentic freedom, the person realizes his vocation; he accomplishes it; he gives a form to his deepest identity," he said.

"In our age, when scientific developments attract and seduce because of the possibilities they offer, it is more important than ever to educate the consciences of our contemporaries so that science never becomes the criteria of goodness, and so that man is respected as the center of creation and does not become the object of ideological manipulation," the pope said.

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