Monday, July 26, 2021

Animals Are People Too

 


I remember as a young boy crying while watching Bambi. When the protagonist fawn, after whom the Disney movie is named, lost his mother when she got shot by a hunter, the tears came rolling down my cheeks. We, in (what used to be) the Christian West, have a high enough standard of living that we love animals to excess. Cars drive around with Save The Baby Seals bumper stickers, almost every home (mine included) has one or more pets (usually dogs and cats), and they are treated as family. Some married couples forego having children to become "mommy" and "daddy" to house pets which are given saints names (I know a doctor who named his cat "Richard"). There have been pets that have received large sums of money when their owner died, and they continue to live in the house; there is a special administrator set up to disburse the money for the upkeep of both the house and animal until the pet dies, and then the house may be sold. There are pets who get lavish toys and gifts in the hundreds or even thousands of dollars.

Let me state right from the outset that I am an animal lover who owns pets. I love and care for them, as any decent person should do. Loving and caring for animals is a great testament to human empathy and kindness, and people can be rightly proud of having such traits. However, there are people who sin by excess or deficiency in regard to the status of animals. They claim that animals and humans are moral equals. This absurd proposition is maintained in one of two ways. First, there are those who exalt animals to the status of human beings.  They claim animals have souls even as we do. There are even two movies, All Dogs Go To Heaven (1989), and All Dogs Go To Heaven 2 (1996), that give popular appeal to the idea for children. This idea is also featured in the adult movie, What Dreams May Come (1998) starring the late Robin Williams (d. 2014). 

Second, there are those who lower human beings to the status of being "just another animal." Human beings are no more than another primate, more highly evolved perhaps, but not exceptional or entitled to more consideration than dogs, cats, pigs and fish. Humans, like all other animals, have no rational soul that survives death (so they claim) and have no right to dominate other animals. This view is that of the lunatic fringe PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) and ALF (Animal Liberation Front) who have no problem with using violent terrorist tactics to "liberate" animals from medical experimentation, etc. 

Both views of animals are contrary to the teaching of the One True Church, and the consequences for humanity are staggering. If humans are just another animal, not created in the image and likeness of God, or if animals also possess a rational soul in the image and likeness of God, it will impact the morality of:

  • eating meat
  • hunting
  • zoos
  • medical research
  • abortion and euthanasia
In this post the wrong views regarding animals will be explored, and the teaching of the Church explained.

All Animals Are Equal
In June of 2007, University of California research ophthalmologist, Dr. Arthur Rosenbaum discovered a firebomb that had been planted under his car. Luckily, it failed to work and the doctor was fine. His colleague, neuropharmacologist Dr. Edythe London, was less fortunate. A garden hose was shoved into a broken window of her Beverly Hills home, flooding it, and causing thousands of dollars in damage. Four months later, a Molotov cocktail (i.e., explosive device) detonated on her doorstep, scorching her entryway but failing to burn down the house. Why would two academics be targeted as if they were guilty of war crimes? What did thy do? Drs. Rosenbaum and London were researching a cure for blindness and drug addiction, respectively. What made these laudatory endeavors "evil," and the doctors "worthy of  death" was that they were experimenting on monkeys.

They were targeted by three groups: Animal Liberation Front (ALF), the Animal Liberation Brigade (ALB), and the UCLA Primate Freedom Project (UCLA-PFP). (See newsweek.com/animal-activists-vs-ucla-94047).  These terrorists use violence (and the threat thereof) to try and scare the best and brightest researchers away from their profession in order to "liberate" the animals on which they experiment. Dr. Rosenbaum's wife actually received a package containing animal fur and razor blades and promising "what he does to the animals we will do to you." It was sent by ALF. These groups are mostly atheists and agnostics who deny that humans occupy a special position in creation. As George Orwell wrote in his famous book Animal Farm, "All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others." So-called animal liberators deny the second part of that; to them "all animals are equal," and humans are just another animal. 

Animal Welfare v. Animal Liberation
How did we get to the point of thinking that people are not only equal to primates but even to fish and birds? The answer lies in Vatican II and the evil sect it created. They do nothing to counteract Neo-Darwinian evolution, and Bergoglio states, "Atheists can go to Heaven." When people are seen as "just another animal," thugs like ALF can justify killing a medical researcher to "liberate" some monkeys. The noble goal of animal welfare degenerated into animal rights. Animal welfare is the term given to those people who run animal shelters so animals can be treated humanely and given homes with caring owners. They also have free neutering services and do all then can to prevent (and raise awareness of) animal cruelty. All of this is good and serves to benefit society.

Animal rights activists think animals are entitled to the same rights as humans, and deny that people have the right to use animals to further any human purpose, no matter how beneficial. There is even an invented word to add to the list of discriminatory actions: besides sexism, racism, and ageism, we now have "speciesism," which is a form of alleged discrimination, wherein people treat animals as having less worth and is just as morally odious as racism. The term was coined in 1970 by a British psychologist, Dr. Richard Ryder. He recalls how he came up with the term 35 years after the event:

The word speciesism came to me while I was lying in a bath in Oxford some 35 years ago. It was like racism or sexism - a prejudice based upon morally irrelevant physical differences. Since Darwin we have known we are human animals related to all the other animals through evolution; how, then, can we justify our almost total oppression of all the other species? All animal species can suffer pain and distress. Animals scream and writhe like us; their nervous systems are similar and contain the same biochemicals that we know are associated with the experience of pain in ourselves.

Our concern for the pain and distress of others should be extended to any "painient" - pain-feeling - being regardless of his or her sex, class, race, religion, nationality or species. Indeed, if aliens from outer space turn out to be painient, or if we ever manufacture machines who are painient, then we must widen the moral circle to include them. Painience is the only convincing basis for attributing rights or, indeed, interests to others...Pain is the one and only true evil. What, then, about the masochist? The answer is that pain gives him pleasure that is greater than his pain! (See https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2005/aug/06/animalwelfare). 

Meet the Maniacal "Father of Animal Rights"

Peter Singer (b.1946), is a philosopher and currently a Professor of Bioethics at Princeton University. In 1975, his book Animal Liberation, was groundbreaking. The "animal rights movement" was virtually non-existent. Within 25 years of his book's publication, animal rights/liberation had taken off and reached tremendous size, visibility, and influence. They now "rescue" farm animals, hamper medical research, declare vegetarianism as a moral imperative, sue to have animals granted legal standing as litigants in lawsuits, and have engaged in illegal acts of criminal terrorism "for the animals." 

Singer's short bio runs thus:
Peter Singer was born in 1946, Melbourne, Australia, to an Austrian Jewish family that emigrated from Austria to escape persecution by the Nazis. He studied law, history and philosophy at the University of Melbourne, and majored in philosophy. He later did a B.Phil at Oxford University, where he associated with a vegetarian student group and became a vegetarian himself. Around this time he wrote Animal Liberation (1975), which has been called the “bible” of the animal liberation movement. ..Singer is best known for his views on animal ethics. In his book Animal Liberation he popularized the term speciesism, which he defines as “a prejudice or attitude of bias in favor of the interests of members of one’s own species and against those of members of other species."  He argues for the equal consideration of human and non-human animal interests because animals have the capacity for suffering and enjoyment. (See utilitarianism.net/utilitarian-thinker/peter-singer). 

His philosophy is anti-Christian and perverse. Singer writes, "Once we admit that Darwin was right when he argued that human ethics evolved from the social instincts that we inherited from our non-human ancestors, we can put aside the hypothesis of a divine origin for ethics." (See Ethics, [1994], pg. 6; Emphasis mine). His principle reason for rejecting the Christian God is the existence of suffering in the world. In particular, he dismisses the idea that mankind is distinct from other animals by being made in the image and likeness of God. This leads him to the utilitarian principle of  "The greatest happiness for the greatest number," which undergirds so much modern political thought. Pleasure becomes the greatest good; suffering and pain the only evils. 

Singer distinguishes human beings in the biological sense from persons, who are rational and self conscious beings. He has no basis for seeing human beings in a different category from other animals. In general, humans have more intelligence and greater self-awareness, but some humans lack these faculties. In the newborn they are undeveloped; in the severely brain damaged they are lost; and in the dementia patients they are fading day by day. They are humans, but not persons. Some adult animals, however, are remarkably intelligent. They are persons, though not human.(See Singer, How are We to Live?, [1993], pg. 191). 

Speciesism asserts that humans are superior to other animals. Such discrimination, in Singer's view, is indefensible. His philosophy not only rules out all cruelty to self-conscious, sentient beings, which includes adult mammals, but also rules out their killing. Fur coats and leather shoes cannot then be justified, and neither, in general, can eating meat. If animal experimentation can ever be justified, then it must be equally justifiable to perform such experiments on severely mentally-retarded human adults, or normal infants who are not aware of what is being done to them. (See Singer, Practical Ethics,[1993] pgs. 59ff). 

Singer also teaches the following:
  •  Infanticide within the first month of  a child's life can be morally justified. Here Singer introduces his ethic of replaceability. A child may not be wanted for various reasons, such as timing, gender or congenital disease. The decision-making process can be profoundly influenced if the death of an unwanted child subsequently allows the parents the freedom to have a wanted child who would replace it.
  • Without consciousness, life has no value. In cases of brain damage making it impossible for the patient to express a preference, involuntary euthanasia should be practiced
  • An individual's desire to die should be respected. Hence, it is ethical for a doctor to assist a suicide in fulfilling the patient's considered preference.
  • Sex between animals and people (beastiality) should be regarded as healthy and normal. 

(See Singer, Rethinking Life and Death, [1994], pgs. 190-198; See also Singer, Heavy Petting, prospectmagazine.co.uk/magazine/heavypetting; WARNING! THIS ARTICLE BY SINGER IS SO VILE, SICK, AND FULL OF VULGARITY, I CAUTION AGAINST READING IT; HIGHLY DISTURBING). 

Animal Rights Activists in Their Own Words

"Owning animals is the equivalent of slavery." Hope Bohanec, In Defense of Animals.

"I'm not only uninterested in having children. I am opposed to having children. Having a purebred human baby is like having a purebred dog; it is nothing but vanity, human vanity." Ingrid Newkirk, PETA's founder and president, New Yorker magazine, April 23, 2003.

"Our goal is to make [the public think of] breeding [dogs and cats] like drunk driving and smoking." Kim Sturla, former director of the Peninsula Humane Society and Western Director of Fund for Animals, stated during Kill the Crisis, not the Animals campaign and workshops, 1991. 

"Six million people died in concentration camps, but six billion broiler chickens will die this year in slaughterhouses." Ingrid Newkirk, founder, president and former national director, PETA, as quoted in Chip Brown, "She's A Portrait of Zealotry in Plastic Shoes," Washington Post, November 13, 1983, p. B10.

"Sometimes I think the only effective method of destroying speciesism would be for each uncaring human to be forced to live the life of a cow on a feedlot, or a monkey in a laboratory, or an elephant in the circus, or a bull in a rodeo, or a mink on a fur farm. Then people would be awakened from their soporific states and finally understand the horror that is inflicted on the animal kingdom by the vilest species to ever roam this planet: the human animal! Deep down, I truly hope that oppression, torture and murder return to each uncaring human tenfold! I hope that fathers accidentally shoot their sons on hunting excursions, while carnivores suffer heart attacks that kill them slowly.

"Every woman ensconced in fur should endure a rape so vicious that it scars them forever. While every man entrenched in fur should suffer an anal raping so horrific that they become disemboweled. Every rodeo cowboy and matador should be gored to death, while circus abusers are trampled by elephants and mauled by tigers. And, lastly, may irony shine its esoteric head in the form of animal researchers catching debilitating diseases and painfully withering away because research dollars that could have been used to treat them was wasted on the barbaric, unscientific practice vivisection." Gary Yourofsky, PETA Humane (sic) Education Lecturer, quoted in the University of Southern Indiana Student Newspaper, The Shield, January 24, 2008; Emphasis mine. 

Interestingly, Yourofsky and his ilk, while condemning the "human animal" for eating meat and being "murderers," do not apply the same standard to lions who kill and eat antelopes. Why aren't lions executed for the "murder" of the antelope? Perhaps Orwell was right--in a way he never conceived---"All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others." For those so concerned with "all life," you'll never see one of these buffoons protesting at an abortion clinic either. 

The Opposite Error: Animals Have Rational Souls
There are those who also reach false conclusions by ascribing to brute beasts (animals) a rational soul. It is true that animals have souls; but not rational souls that are immortal. It is Catholic dogma (defined at the Council of Vienne) that human beings have a rational soul:

Furthermore, with the approval of the above mentioned sacred council we reprove as erroneous and inimical to the Catholic faith every doctrine or position rashly asserting or turning to doubt that the substance of the rational or intellective soul truly and in itself is not a form of the human body, defining, so that the truth of sincere faith may be known to all, and the approach to all errors may be cut off, lest they steal in upon us, that whoever shall obstinately presume in turn to assert, define, or hold that the rational or intellective soul is not the form of the human body in itself and essentially must be regarded as a heretic.

The Universal and Ordinary Magisterium has always denied rational souls to plants and animals. The three "types" of souls were given their classic formulation by the Angelic Doctor:

St. Thomas Aquinas’s anthropology of the soul accounts for three divisions of the soul: the Vegetative, the Sensitive (or sentient), and the Rational. Plants have only a vegetative soul---the power that allows for vital basics such as nourishment, growth, and reproduction. The sentient soul is inherent in all animals, it encompasses sensation, perception, and movement. The rational soul is specific to human beings only, and is the soul which is responsible for reason and thinking. Human beings possess all three kinds of souls, animals possess both the sentient and vegetative souls, and plants only have the vegetative. 

The lowest of the operations of the soul is that which is performed by a corporeal organ, and by virtue of a corporeal quality. Yet this transcends the operation of the corporeal nature; because the movements of bodies are caused by an extrinsic principle, while these operations are from an intrinsic principle; for this is common to all the operations of the soul, since very animate thing, in some way, moves itself. Such is the operation of the ‘vegetative soul.'” (Summa Theologica, Q. 78, Art. 1).

There is another operation of the soul, which is indeed performed through a corporeal organ, but not through a corporeal quality, and this is the operation of the "sentient soul." (Ibid, Q. 78, Art. 1).

There exists, therefore, an operation of the soul which so far exceeds the corporeal nature that it is not even performed by any corporeal organ; and such is the operation of the "rational soul." (Ibid, Q. 78, Art. 1). 

Ironically, the same false pope, whose sect gives rise to animal rights, simultaneously gives rise to the heresy of animals with rational souls. While doing nothing to combat Neo-Darwinian evolution, the sect also idolizes nature--including animals--giving them undue importance. Bergoglio, is a naturalist with some occasional Catholic terminology thrown in. It's not surprising in his so-called encyclical, he teaches animals can go to Heaven (he wouldn't want anything, let alone anybody left out):

Eternal life will be a shared experience of awe, in which each creature, resplendently transfigured, will take its rightful place and have something to give those poor men and women who will have been liberated once and for all...(Laudato Si--2015). 

Montini (Paul VI) had this to say to a boy who had lost his pet dog:  “One day we will again see our animals in the eternity of Christ." (See https://www.cnn.com/2014/12/12/world/pope-francis-animals-heaven/index.html). Both false popes give the impression of "animals sharing in the Beatific Vision." If animals received the Beatific Vision, they would be moral equivalents of humans, and all the things that animal rights activists want prohibited would be correct. Yet animals do not possess a rational soul and they are not moral creatures capable of sin; they have sentient souls and are amoral. Hence, such a position is both absurd and heretical.

The Teaching of the Church
The correct teaching on the position of animals and their relationship to humans is well-stated by theologian Cronin, The Science of Ethics, [1939], 2:86-92):
  • Animals are not possessed of rights, and, therefore in killing them no injustice is done to them
  • Animals are incapable, by their very nature, of claiming anything of their own. Reason is the faculty that allows one to claim something as their own. Animals do not possess the faculty of reason to claim anything, therefore they do not come within the scope of having rights 
  • Animals exist for humanity. They never would have been brought into existence had humans not been created. They may be used for the betterment of people
  • Even though humans have no duties towards animals, they are part of God's creation, and as such cruelty to animals is sinful. To make animals suffer needlessly, or to take pleasure in animal suffering, is seriously sinful 
Nevertheless, don't think there's no hope of ever seeing your beloved pet again; the Church actually leaves this possibility open! According to theologian Sagues, "The world will not be annihilated, but it will be renewed...What will the renewed world be like? In general, such as is suitable for the status of the blessed. Hence, since the blessed, being now incorruptible, do not need vegetables and animals, many [theologians] have thought that all of these things will be lacking in that future world. But what others [theologians] hold seems to be more probable, namely, that the organic kingdom of plants and animals agrees with that world, as its complement and for the greater delight of the blessed." (See Sacrae Theologiae Summa IVB, [1956], pgs. 494-495; Emphasis mine).  Is it therefore possible that Almighty God could bring back those pets whom the blessed enjoyed while on Earth, working out their salvation? I see no theological reason against it! 

Conclusion
Animals are part of God's creation and here for us to use, but not to abuse. Having a pet is a blessing. By bringing humans down to the level of animals, or exalting animals to the status of humans, both errors result in a world unintended by God where humans--who alone have a supernatural destiny--will be harmed. George Orwell was correct in a way he couldn't understand in 1948 when he penned the closing line of Animal Farm:

The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again; but already it was impossible to say which was which.

60 comments:

  1. You are right, we will never see these fanatics protesting in front of an abortion clinic. Yet they should do it because abortion is a cruel act. The unborn child feels pain when a "doctor" crushes it with forceps or injects it with poison to kill it ... but the problem is that its cries are not heard. And this is also no problem for animal fanatics, who are also generally green fanatics and who attribute climate change to humans. These people even want man to disappear from this earth, which is why they are also supporters of abortion and contraception (and also defenders of LGBT).

    It is a sign that we are in a time of great apostasy. People no longer want to hear the truth and they buy into everything they hear from fabulators. This is what we have seen for over 200 years. People have adopted the idea that we come from an ape and that we were not created by God, nor everything in existence. And in politics, "human rights" have replaced divine law ...

    What's the next step ? Maybe someone will find out that bacteria have rights! Perhaps we will see defenders of bacteria protest in front of laboratories that manufacture drugs because they kill innocent living beings who have rights and who may go to Heaven according to Montini and Bergoglio.

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    1. Simon,
      You may be on to something! "Bacteria rights" sounds as crazy as animal rights did 50 years. It might be the next wave of lunacy!

      God Bless,

      ---Introibo

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    2. I see people on TV demonstrating against the decision of the authorities in a city in Canada to kill white-tailed deer that are damaging a park. Meanwhile, how many children will be killed in abortion clinics? But these same animal rights activists will not go protest against the crime of abortion. These same people say that there are too many humans on Earth and that we are destroying this planet so, they claim, we have to control the population. There aren't too many humans on Earth, but there are certainly too many leftists, ecologists and wokes, all revolted against God and worshiping creatures rather than the Creator.

      Delete
    3. Simon,
      People worship the creature not the Creator--you get that right. An unborn baby gets less consideration than a baby seal (literally).

      God Bless,

      ---Introibo

      Delete
  2. I'll be sharing this article with a friend of mine who believes animals along with humans go to heaven. I doubt she will believe in your article, but the Council of Vienne is clear. She must believe in the dogma that only humans have rational souls and immortal souls, which would exclude animals. Once she is shown what the Church says she no longer will have an excuse to believe in her error. Thank you.

    Lee

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    1. Lee,
      Your friend is not alone in that belief---it is quite common! I hope you are able to get her to abandon this error with God's Grace.

      God Bless,

      ---Introibo

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    2. Vienne only teaches that humans have a rational and intellective soul. It doesn't say only humans do. Your friend is in error, but not against Vienne.

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    3. @anon7:26
      This teaching by the Council of Vienne has always been UNANIMOUSLY held by all approved theologians to positively exclude animals. Aquinas, cited above, held this as true before Vienne. AS I said in my post, "The Universal and Ordinary Magisterium has always denied rational souls to plants and animals." The UOM is equally infallible; Vienne, thus understood, excludes animals and plants. To claim a rational soul for animals is heretical.

      God Bless,

      ---Introibo

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    4. I know UOM condemns it, but I didn't know theologians taught Vienne positively excludes animals, sorry

      Delete
    5. It didn't go well with my friend. She was told what the Church says regarding how we are to view animals in comparison to humans and she went off. She cursed and said I don't give a ______ what the Church teaches, that is evil. Afterwards, it got heated and the conversation didn't end in peace.

      I don't know why certain people have such a hard time with this. It's simple: Man was created in the image and likeness of God. Animals were not. We don't eat humans and we know by reason it is wrong to kill and eat humans. We eat animals because God created them for our benefit. If animals had an immortal soul they would have to be rational like man. It is irrational to say animals are rational creatures.

      While I love animals, insects, fish, birds etc. it would be nice to see them in heaven but heaven is not earth. The same goes for sentimental objects and things we own. It's like that old saying, "You can't take it with you once you are in the grave."

      Lee

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    6. Lee,
      To borrow a line from the movie "A Few Good Men" your friend "can't handle the truth." Some people will never follow the facts where they lead--their minds are made up. That's why the R&R remains.

      God Bless,

      ---Introibo

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    7. Was she a practicing Catholic when you told her? Or did she renounce Catholicism only when you talked to her about it?

      Delete
    8. Anon. 1:56

      She is a practicing Catholic.

      She also believes
      *That the Church is defectible
      *That Jesus was not born on Dec. 25
      *That other religions are good
      *That Baptism does not remove punishment due to sin at the moment it is received, if you are an adult.
      *That the bible is superior to the Church and the Papacy

      Unfortunately she is really Protestant but she goes to a traditional chapel, and is fresh from the indult/motu crowd. I'm working on her but I don't think she is going to change her mind.

      Lee

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    9. Have a Holy Mass offered for her moral temporal spiritual well being and give her a Priest to talk with,not you or any other layman.

      You're pushing her away and people need priestly counseling,this is why they exist.
      God bless -Andrew

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    10. Andrew,

      She has talked to a priest and she gave him the same reaction. Is he pushing her away too?

      There is nothing wrong with counseling people in religion. If there was, then Confirmation means nothing because a gift you receive at Confirmation is Counseling and you are to let your light shine before men. She rejects the Church based on her own bad will. She is lucky that I even talk to her, because most people wouldn't. I do pray for her conversion but it's going to be uphill from here.

      Lee

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    11. Nothing wrong with it of course but when someone is getting angry it's time to step back and give them space.
      Catechism says after 2 brief conversations,say nothing and give them a Priest to contact then leave it in God's hands.
      (Deharbe catechism)
      -A

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  3. Did you know that cheetahs strangle gazelles to death in order to eat them? The parasitic wasp literally paralyses a spider ALIVE so that it's babies can have food. And ants have aphids living with them so they can eat a juice the aphid produces. Some animals even practice cruelty with members of their own species. Every animal species acts in favor of it's own species. I can't see why the noblest and smartest species can't benefit from the suffering of others.

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    1. @anon9:56
      You see the obvious craziness; it's scary that many do not!

      God Bless,

      ---Introibo

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  4. The mention of Bambi reminds me of the article I wrote last week. I am making a series of articles about children media. All of you who have children may be interested on visiting my article. http://quisutdeusinenglish.blogspot.com/2021/07/millstones-on-road-i-be-yourself-message.html
    - Poni

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    1. Poni,
      Your post is excellent, and I recommend all my readers to visit your blog and read it too.

      God Bless,

      ---Introibo

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    2. Thank you for your endorsement.
      I plan to publish a Millstones on the Road Article every week for those of you who have children or are interested. Would love to have feedback too.
      - Poni

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    3. Thank you for the blog Poni.
      I'll check it out as I don't know of many traditional Catholic blogs other than the home alone sedevacantist House wife blog.
      May the Holy Trinity guide and bless your efforts.
      -Andrew

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    4. Thank you Andrew.

      Delete
  5. Man, I hate utilitarianism so much. People just like to assert moral systems, no matter how arbitrary, as being true just to avoid any notion of religion. Aside from the fact that this arbitrariness necessarily makes such moral systems fail as normative ethical theories (they'd necessarily have to be classed under universalism, and usually are, since no honest person can promote nihilism (they wouldn't follow utilitarianism in the first place), and relativism is quite easily demonstrated to be self-defeating), even the formulation of them is simply so flawed I can't keep myself from cringing hard. For instance, what constitutes "happiness"? Different people have different things that make them happy, to define/impose a universal metric of happiness would necessarily discard *some* people's ideas of happiness, and this imposition would have no rational justification, there would be no reason for its being true, not even the dumb argument from evolution would help. In other words, what if someone belongs to two different groups of people (say, the result of a mixed family) that have opposing ideas of happiness? If a universal metric of happiness was imposed, at least some ideas of happiness from either groups, maybe even all ideas, would have to be discarded, but what makes this universal metric true? As Introibo noted, one main justification for utilitarianism is evolution, however if this is the case, it clearly led to different ideas of happiness. It is impossible for any one metric of happiness to be universal and, hence, utilitarianism must necessarily fall under the relativist system which we know to be absurd.

    Note: Either way secular universalist ethical systems are irrelevant to individual practice of morality because they're not binding. As long as you can do anything you may want without getting caught, no one will know so it doesn't actually matter even if it's "morally evil" according to some arbitrary moral system. It reduces the following of a moral system for the sake of pleasing God, to the following of a moral system, *when no other option is viable*, for the sake of not being punished (lessening happiness). Utilitarianism is inevitably reduced to "maximizing individual happiness while increasing others' happiness so that it doesn't restrict your own happiness".

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Dapouf,
      "Utilitarianism is inevitably reduced to "maximizing individual happiness while increasing others' happiness so that it doesn't restrict your own happiness"."

      That's the best summation of utilitarianism I've read!

      God Bless,

      ---Introibo

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  6. I would group radical environmentalists and Earth First types alongside the PETA/ALF people, as their overall animus against humanity is similar in both category and scope.

    As the recently departed Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, was noted for saying in 1988 (per the Guardian: https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2009/jun/21/quotes-by-prince-philip): "In the event that I am reincarnated, I would like to return as a deadly virus, to contribute something to solving overpopulation."

    (And this is a guy who apparently co-wrote a book in 1989 titled "Survival or Extinction: A Christian Attitude to the Environment", so you know he was a 'true believer.')

    Sincerely,

    A Simple Man

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    1. A Simple Man,
      If that's the "Christian attitude" to the environment, I can only shudder as to what he considers the "atheist attitude"!

      God Bless you my friend,

      ---Introibo

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    2. Was he joking or not? He's known for his humour.

      Delete
    3. He was most likely being patronizing yet allowing the readers to see his contempt for most of mankind.
      Pray 1 decade of the Holy Rodary for his conversion.
      -Andrew

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    4. Oops just saw he was dead.
      Pray for Soul.
      -Andrew

      Delete
  7. What souls do bacteria have? Vegetative and sentient?

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    1. @anon12:08
      An interesting question! I don't know any theologians who directly address this question. It could be sentient and vegetative or perhaps just vegetative. It is definitely not rational for certain!

      God Bless,

      ---Introibo

      Delete
    2. i am very far from being qualified to answer this, but my 2 penny's worth, is that Aquinas/aristotle is simply describing reality, not prescrbing it. So that a plant has a 'plant's soul' and an animal has an 'animal's soul'. If a bacterium (?) is neither sufficiently plant nor animal it will have a 'bacterium's soul', and that's about it.

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    3. Green R,
      My 2 cents; the "vegetative" soul is not unique to vegetation/plants as such, rather as you rightly point out, it reacts in a certain way. It can only react to stimuli to cause a certain effect. Sentient souls mean they can move on their own, have sensations and the like. The rational soul can reason. Can bacterium reason? No. Is it sentient? If it can move on its own and have sensations/perceptions, then yes--but that is dubious. Definitely a vegetative soul. I agree with you these souls are descriptive of WHAT THE SUBJECT CAN DO, not what it is, which is why it is a sentient soul and not an "animalistic soul." Since these three divisions "cover all descriptive bases" there is no need to posit a "bacterial soul" or a "fungi soul" etc.

      God Bless,

      ---Introibo

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  8. Chesterton:
    "The vivisectionist, for the sake of doing something that may or may not be useful, does something that certainly is horrible. The anti-Christmas humanitarian, in seeking to have a sympathy with a turkey which no man can have with a turkey, loses the sympathy he has already with the happiness of millions of the poor"

    I am uncomfortable with the idea of experimenting on monkeys. Becasue they cannot see the beatific vision, i do not think we have the right to torture them. Animal rights people are the other extreme imv of this cruel heartlessness, and both should be rejected: for a sort of chestertonian sanity.

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    1. GreenR,
      I agree that necessary experimentation should be as pain free as possible. Nothing should be done that "may or may not be useful." If there is no reasonable certainty that humans will benefit in some way from the information, such experiments should not be done. It would being doing something "just because" and that is needlessly inflicting pain on animals.

      God Bless,

      ---Introibo

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    2. But isn't it implied in 'experimentation' that it 'may or may not' be useful?
      but it is 'certainly horrible'
      I think Chesterton was saying such things could be justified only with the most pressing and personal need.
      If, by boring holes in monkeys heads, there is a possibility less people die of cancer or suffer blindness (or whatever)- i DO NOT think that is a fair quid pro quo. There are many ways no doubt of improving these things (and-in anycase-we were born to die): for a start by scaling back the insane demands of modern technological society, whihc no doubt fosters the ills and then sells us its cures- partly by boring holes in monkeys heads!
      Yes, God bless- and thanks for the articles

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    3. GreenR,
      Your empathy for animals being treated with care is admirable. However, let's suppose there is a great breakthrough in cancer research. It has the possibility to cure all forms of cancer so no one need to suffer from it again. There needs to be testing before approval. Scientists can tell by reactions in mice and monkeys whether or not to proceed to testing on humans prior to final FDA approval. Would you forego a realistic possibility of a cure for cancer to avoid animal experimentation? Would you experiment directly on humans first and possibly cause them death?

      That "we are born to die" no one can deny. However, that does not prevent us from trying to live as long and healthy as possible. The Fifth Commandment imposes on us a duty to care for our health and bodies.

      God Bless,

      ---Introibo

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  9. Introibo/A Simple Man,
    I have a question regarding the heresy of religious freedom promulgated by Vatican II in "Dignitatis humanae".
    I have heard it said that there is a difference between a moral right and a civil right. Does Vaticanum II teach religious liberty as a moral right or a civil right?
    "The Catechism of the Catholic Church" approved by Wojtyła in 1992 states:
    "2108 The right to religious liberty is neither a moral license to adhere to error, nor a supposed right to error, but rather a natural right of the human person to civil liberty, i.e., immunity, within just limits, from external constraint in religious matters by political authorities. This natural right ought to be recognized in the juridical order of society in such a way that it constitutes a civil right."
    The Novus Ordo Apologist has put forward that this constitutes evidence for the orthodoxy of Vatican II religious liberty since "The right to religious liberty is neither a moral license to adhere to error, nor a supposed right to error...."
    How would you respond to this argument? Is this distinction between moral right and civil right correct?

    God Bless,
    Paweł

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    Replies
    1. Paweł,

      Firstly, the juxtaposition of 'moral rights' versus 'civil rights' is a false dichotomy, insofar as religious liberty goes. Although the state has a proper interest in promoting the one true religion (as the Church has taught), it is erroneous to state that the liberty to choose religion is something which touches only on civil rights, for religion is intrinsically bound with morality. As Dignitatis Humanae itself states: "The council further declares that the right to religious freedom has its foundation in the very dignity of the human person as this dignity is known through the revealed word of God and by reason itself."

      The Council itself couches religious freedom as being bound within the dignity of the human person, and that this is KNOWN (so it argues) through divine revelation and reason. Thus, Vatican II considers religious liberty as being a moral right (since natural rights exist prior to any civil right, as they were inherent regardless of what ever level of civilization one finds themselves in); as such, this implies that man has the right to choose whatever religion he pleases. This formulation IMPLICITLY provides the very foundation for license in religion.

      Introibo has written two previous articles on this subject:

      https://introiboadaltaredei2.blogspot.com/2015/10/christus-regnat.html
      https://introiboadaltaredei2.blogspot.com/2019/03/separation-of-sanity-and-state.html

      To these, I would also add Pope Leo XIII's great encyclicals Immortale Dei (https://introiboadaltaredei2.blogspot.com/2019/03/separation-of-sanity-and-state.html) and Libertas Praestantissimum (https://www.papalencyclicals.net/leo13/l13liber.htm).

      Sincerely,

      A Simple Man

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    2. A Simple Man,
      Thank you very much for your reply.I finally understood the text and heresy of "Dignitatis humanae". It teaches that no one should be prevented from following his own religious conscience, which implicitly implies that man has a natural right to propagate false religions.
      When I tried to talk to my cousin (a Novus Ordo minister), and stated that dogmas cannot contradict each other, and by accepting Vatican II this is exactly what is happening. He stated that he does not know what a dogma is. Well, in the Vatican II sect the concept of dogma has no meaning, since Bergoglio denies all dogmas one by one (he called transubstantiation an interpretation).

      God Bless,
      Paweł

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    3. Paweł,

      It's noteworthy that in the "Catechism of the Catholic Church" promulgated by JP2, few lines are spent explaining the concepts of dogma (CCC 88-90) and heresy (CCC 2089); while spending far more ink teaching a heretical ecclesiology contrary to pre-V2 dogma (CCC 817-819):

      x

      In fact, "in this one and only Church of God from its very beginnings there arose certain rifts, which the Apostle strongly censures as damnable. But in subsequent centuries much more serious dissensions appeared and large communities became separated from full communion with the Catholic Church - for which, often enough, men of both sides were to blame." The ruptures that wound the unity of Christ's Body - here we must distinguish heresy, apostasy, and schism - do not occur without human sin:

      'Where there are sins, there are also divisions, schisms, heresies, and disputes. Where there is virtue, however, there also are harmony and unity, from which arise the one heart and one soul of all believers.'

      "However, one cannot charge with the sin of the separation those who at present are born into these communities [that resulted from such separation] and in them are brought up in the faith of Christ, and the Catholic Church accepts them with respect and affection as brothers .... All who have been justified by faith in Baptism are incorporated into Christ; they therefore have a right to be called Christians, and with good reason are accepted as brothers in the Lord by the children of the Catholic Church."

      [ASM's Note: CCC 819 redacted due to character space. See here: https://www.vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/__P29.HTM]

      x

      In fact, CCC 818's gratuitous assertion that those "born into [separated] communities...are brought up in the faith of Christ" runs contrary to ST II-II, q.5, a.3, where St. Thomas answers the question of whether heretics who disbelieve one article of faith can have faith in others:

      "I answer that, neither living nor lifeless faith remains in a heretic who disbelieves one article of faith. The reason of this is that the species of every habit depends on the formal aspect of the object, without which the species of the habit cannot remain. Now the formal object of faith is the First Truth, as manifested in Holy Writ and the teaching of the Church, which proceeds from the First Truth. Consequently whoever does not adhere, as to an infallible and Divine rule, to the teaching of the Church, which proceeds from the First Truth manifested in Holy Writ, has not the habit of faith, but holds that which is of faith otherwise than by faith. Even so, it is evident that a man whose mind holds a conclusion without knowing how it is proved, has not scientific knowledge, but merely an opinion about it. Now it is manifest that he who adheres to the teaching of the Church, as to an infallible rule, assents to whatever the Church teaches; otherwise, if, of the things taught by the Church, he holds what he chooses to hold, and rejects what he chooses to reject, he no longer adheres to the teaching of the Church as to an infallible rule, but to his own will. Hence it is evident that a heretic who obstinately disbelieves one article of faith, is not prepared to follow the teaching of the Church in all things; but if he is not obstinate, he is no longer in heresy but only in error. Therefore it is clear that such a heretic with regard to one article has no faith in the other articles, but only a kind of opinion in accordance with his own will."

      Hence it's theologically incorrect to state that those belonging to a non-Catholic sect HAVE faith in Christ, objectively speaking.

      Sincerely,

      A Simple Man

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  10. Although mankind has the dignity of being souls created in the image and likeness of God and the Angels, we also have the indignity of the burden of Original Sin; so we often fall lower than the animals (which cannot sin), through our own sins. But denying the truth is another level of sin.

    A significant example of this today is the rebellion against nature by those who control the media, etc., with attempted gender-swapping and identities and the promotion thereof. Some people choose to believe that these things have validity, even if there is nothing (technically) wrong with them. However, an animal would never go against its own nature unless that nature was impeded in some way.

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  11. Plenty of these radical Animal Rights Activists may have been blessed with a fair amount of natural intelligence (if nothing they are certainly clever and crafty), but their rejection of God and their failure to accept the reasonableness of the natural order proves the saying: "Evil makes you stupid!"

    Jannie

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    1. Jannie,
      I never heard that expression, but it fits! Now, I may actually use it from time to time myself!

      God Bless,

      ---Introibo

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  12. An excellent article as always.Have a question for you Introibo.Doing some research and have found that 38% of Catholic marriages end in divorce(Expect this is Novus Ordo folk)Bet the rate is higher.Why such a high rate.Do you think the man and woman are both Catholics or some are other false religions.What do you think if one of your children came home and told you they were going to marry a Hindu.I have seen many news items of Novus Ordo men or woman having a Novus Ordo ceremony and the next day go to the Hindu temple to have a Hindu ceremony and be "blessed" by the "priest"I would value other readers comments.

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    1. @anon9:42
      There are many reasons that could fill more than one post. I will just list a few ("Catholic" is hereby understood as the V2 sect):

      *the ease of "annulments" and No-fault divorce. When things get tough, say good-bye.

      * the high rate of mixed marriages and the indifferentism with which everything is treated

      *Marriage is not a vocation, but about personal happiness

      * People marry who arenot called to it because they want to "fit in"

      I would hope my child would be sufficiently instructed in the Faith and devout, so they would not even consider dating someone who was not Traditionalist or someone open to the same who is not pagan and willing to convert.

      If he was going to marry a pagan Hindu and go to their demon gods, I would practice tough love and disown him unless/until he and his wife convert to the One True Church.

      God Bless,

      ---Introibo

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    2. Have a Holy Sacrifice of the Mass offered for their conversion at a valid Traditional Catholic Chapel.
      Usually costs $15 or $20.
      -Andrew

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    3. Costs? Mass Stipends are an offering, a donation, a gift, but never a payment!

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    4. Well pardon me.
      -Andrew

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    5. Introibo, if a priest demands a specific stipend, does it still count as an offering or donation?

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    6. @anon2:35
      It is still an "offering" under Church nomenclature.

      God Bless,

      ---Introibo

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    7. So what matters is the intent of the giver, so that it doesn't become simony then?

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  13. Great article on origin of the Holy Rosary.

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/12f8kQ8fNVEZJLVQh6lCip9Jy5GUAxNig/view?usp=drivesdk

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  14. This is off topic. I have read that there is no test for the Delta variant of COVID-19. If there is no test for Delta how are the powers that be determining whether a person has Delta? Perhaps it is the common cold, or the flu?

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    1. Delta is Covid self identifying as Delta. (sorry I could not resist)
      Can you please push the link? We are interested. Thank you.

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    2. Anon @2:18,
      Here is the link:

      https://www.deseret.com/coronavirus/2021/7/20/22585747/covid-test-for-delta-variant

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  15. You should have included this:

    "One who kills another's ox sins, not through killing the ox, but through injuring another man in his property." - St. Thomas Aquinas, ST 2-2.64.1ad3

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