Article brought to you by: Catholic Online (www.catholic.org)Pope Warns Doctors of Relativism Impacting Medicine
By David Kerr
May 4th, 2012 Catholic News Agency (www.catholicnewsagency.com) The Pope observed that it is as if modern man is "dazzled by technical efficacy," and therefore "forgets the essential horizon of the question of meaning, thus relegating the transcendent dimension to insignificance." When meaning is lost and the transcendent forgotten, he explained, "thought becomes weak" and "an ethical impoverishment gains ground, which clouds legal references of value." ROME, Italy (CNA/EWTN News) - Pope Benedict XVI used a May 3 address to doctors and medical students to warn that the spread of relativism is resulting in scientific advances having "unpredictable consequences." While he granted that scientific discoveries are a "reason for pride," the pontiff warned that they are often "not without troubling implications," such that "behind the widespread optimism of scientific knowledge, the shadow of a crisis of thought is spreading." When meaning is lost and the transcendent forgotten, he explained, "thought becomes weak" and "an ethical impoverishment gains ground, which clouds legal references of value." All in all, the Pope stated, "the once fruitful root of European culture and progress seems forgotten." This techno-practical mentality "generates a risky imbalance between what is technically possible and what is morally good, with unpredictable consequences." Instead, is it God who "must take the initiative to encounter and speak to man," he said. The Pope also focused on the "fruitful reciprocity" between science and faith, a relationship that he described as "almost a complementary need to understand reality." In addition to the medical students and faculty, his speech was also attended by many students from the Catholic University's Bioethics Center, which aims to assist scientists and doctors in taking an ethical approach to medical research and treatment. "Dear friends," the Pope said, "allow yourselves to always be guided by the wisdom that comes from above, from a knowledge illuminated by faith, remembering that wisdom requires the passion and hard work of research." Article brought to you by: Catholic Online (www.catholic.org) |