« Paul VI » : différence entre les versions
From Liberpédia
Turion (discussion | contribs) Aucun résumé des modifications |
Turion (discussion | contribs) Aucun résumé des modifications |
||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
: [[Ayn Rand]], [http://en.liberpedia.org/Of_Living_Death Of Living Death] | : [[Ayn Rand]], [http://en.liberpedia.org/Of_Living_Death Of Living Death] | ||
* [[Ayn Rand]], [[Philosophy: Who Needs It]], « An Untitled Letter » : | * [[Ayn Rand]], [[Philosophy: Who Needs It]], « [https://courses.aynrand.org/works/an-untitled-letter/ An Untitled Letter] » : | ||
:But it is not amusing any longer when a news item in The New York Times (January 2, 1973) announces that Pope Paul VI “issued a call today for a ‘new justice.’ True justice recognizes that all men are in substance equal, the Pontiff said. . . . ‘The littler, the poorer, the more suffering, the more defenseless, even the lower a man has fallen, the more he deserves to be assisted, raised up, cared for, and honored. We learn this from the Gospel.’ ” | :But it is not amusing any longer when a news item in The New York Times (January 2, 1973) announces that Pope Paul VI “issued a call today for a ‘new justice.’ True justice recognizes that all men are in substance equal, the Pontiff said. . . . ‘The littler, the poorer, the more suffering, the more defenseless, even the lower a man has fallen, the more he deserves to be assisted, raised up, cared for, and honored. We learn this from the Gospel.’ ” |
Version actuelle datée du 31 October 2021 à 03:57
Pape de l’Église catholique.
- Dignitatis Humanae, Paul VI, 1965
- Populorum Progressio, Paul VI, 1967
- Humanae Vitae, Paul VI, 1968
- But it is not amusing any longer when a news item in The New York Times (January 2, 1973) announces that Pope Paul VI “issued a call today for a ‘new justice.’ True justice recognizes that all men are in substance equal, the Pontiff said. . . . ‘The littler, the poorer, the more suffering, the more defenseless, even the lower a man has fallen, the more he deserves to be assisted, raised up, cared for, and honored. We learn this from the Gospel.’ ”
- Observe the package-deal: to be “little,” “poor,” “suffering,” “defenseless” is not necessarily to be immoral (it depends on the cause of these conditions). But “even the lower a man has fallen” implies, in this context, not misfortune but immorality. Are we asked to absorb the notion that the lower a man’s vices, the more concern he deserves—and the more honor? Another package-deal: to be “assisted,” “raised up,” “cared for” obviously does not apply to those who are great, rich, happy or strong; they do not need it. But—“to be honored”? They are the men who would have to do the assisting, the raising up, the caring for—but they do not deserve to be honored? They deserve less honor than the man who is saved by their virtues and values?