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August 5, 2009 16:43
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If someone else came from the moon in some extraodinary machine, like | |
Gonsales, and told us credible tales about his homeland, we would take him to | |
be a lunarian; and yet we might grant him the rights of a native and a citizen | |
in our society, as well as the title *man*, despite the fact that he was a | |
stranger to our globe; but if he asked to be baptized, and to be regarded as a | |
convert to our faith, I believe that we would see great disputes arising among | |
the theologians. And if relations were opened up between ourselves and these | |
planetary men--whom M. Huygens says are not much different from men here--the | |
problem would warrant calling an Ecumenical Council to determine whether we | |
should undertake the propagation of our faith in regions beyond our globe. No | |
doubt some would maintain that the rational animals from those lands, not | |
being descended from Adam, do not partake of redemption by Jesus Christ; but | |
perhaps others would say that we do not know enough about all the places that | |
Adam was ever in, or about what became of his descendants--for there have been | |
theologians who have thought that Paradise was located on the moon. Perhaps | |
there would be a majority decision in favour of the safest course, which would | |
be to baptize these suspect humans conditionally on their being baptizable. | |
But I doubt if they would ever be found acceptable as priests of the Roman | |
Church, because until there was some revelation their consecration would | |
always be suspect, and that, according to the doctrine of that Church, would | |
expose people to the danger of unintentional idolatry. Fortunately, we are | |
spared these perplexities by the nature of things; but still these bizarre | |
fictions have their use in abstract studies, as aids to a better grasp of the | |
nature of our ideas. | |
Leibniz, New Essays on Human Understanding, 314 |
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