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Monday, April 7, 2025

CONSCIENCE

 


 

 

The very idea of “moral truth” is a puzzlement and offense to many of our contemporaries. We are now paddling in the murky sea of “modern emotivism.”

Morality has become almost totally a matter of feelings and preferences. You have yours and I have mine. If I say that something is “wrong,” I am expressing no more than my personal preference. “I am not comfortable with that.” “I feel that is not right.” “I would prefer you not do that.” In short, the making of arguments is replaced by the expression of emotions. In such a cultural context, the appeal to “conscience” is only an appeal to my personal preference. Conscience, I this view, does not discern moral truth but subjectively establishes the truth. This deep shift in the understanding of conscience and truth is addressed in the 1993 encyclical of John Paul II, Veritatis Splendor (The Splendor of Truth).

         

                    Certain currents of modern thought have gone so far as to exalt           freedom to such an extent that it becomes an absolute, which would   then be the source of values. This is the direction taken by doctrines      which have lost the sense of the transcendent or which are explicitly       atheist. The individual conscience is accorded the status of a    supreme tribunal of moral judgment which hands down categorical         and infallible decisions about good and evil. To the affirmation that    one has a duty to follow one’s conscience is unduly added the           affirmation that one’s moral judgment is true merely by the fact that it           has its origin in the conscience. But in this way the inescapable        claims of truth disappear, yielding their place to a criterion of sincerity, authenticity and “being at peace with oneself”, so much         so that some have come to adopt a radically subjectivist conception          of moral judgment.

                   As is immediately evident, the crisis of truth is not unconnected with this development. Once the idea of a universal truth about the          good, knowable by human reason, is lost, inevitably the notion of conscience also changes. Conscience is no longer considered in its          primordial reality as an act of a person’s intelligence, the function of    which is to apply the universal knowledge of the good in a specific   situation and thus to express a judgment about the right conduct to     be chosen here and now. Instead, there is a tendency to grant to the       individual conscience the prerogative of independently determining the criteria of good and evil and then acting accordingly. Such an      outlook is quite congenial to an individualist ethic, wherein each      individual is faced with his own truth, different from the truth of others.        Taken to its extreme consequences, this individualism leads to a           denial of the very idea of human nature.

                    These different notions are at the origin of currents of thought    which posit a radical opposition between moral law and conscience,    and between nature and freedom.

The liberal idea of conscience dispenses with truth.