The Benedictine-scientist priest Stanley L. Jaki , Templeton Prize winner, made an objective mistake on Vatican Council II.The Benedictine-scientist priest Fr. Stefano Visintin, former Rector of the University of St. Anselm, Rome, avoided it.Jaki considered hypothetical cases as being objective.Visintin considered them just hypothetical and theoretical and not objective.-Lionel Andrades
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MARCH 7, 2021
Fr. Stanley L. Jaki osb, Templeton Prize winner made an objective mistake on Vatican Council II
We are really talking physics.Lumen Gentium 16 does not refer to a stationary body, or a body with momentum, capable of velocity, a body with mass.
It refers only to a thought.
This connection between science and faith was not made by the Templeton Prize winner. This was a rupture between faith and reason.
- Lionel Andrades
Stanley L. Jaki OSB (Jáki Szaniszló László) (17 August 1924 in Győr, Hungary – 7 April 2009 in Madrid, Spain)[1][2] was a Hungarian-born priest of the Benedictine order. From 1975 to his death, he was Distinguished University Professor at Seton Hall University, in South Orange, New Jersey. He held doctorates in theology and in physics and was a leading contributor to the philosophy of science and the history of science, particularly to their relationship to Christianity. In 2018, Jaki was named one of five Catholic scientists "that shaped our understanding of the world" by Aleteia; the other four are: Copernicus, Gregor Mendel, Giuseppe Mercalli and Georges Lemaitre...
Jaki died in Madrid following a heart attack. He was in Spain visiting friends, on his way back to the United States after delivering lectures in Rome, for the Master in Faith and Science of the Pontificio Ateneo Regina Apostolorum, Rome.- Wikipedia
https://eucharistandmission.blogspot.com/2021/03/fr-p-stanley-jaki-osb-templeton-prize.html
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