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Features
Friday, October 19th, 2012
Two stem cell researchers have shared the Nobel Prize in Medicine for 2012, an elderly Briton, Sir John B. Gurdon, and a younger Japanese, Shinya Yamanaka. By a serendipitous coincidence, Sir John made his discovery in 1962 — the year of Yamanaka’s birth. Fifty years of stem cell research have brought cures for intractable diseases Read more
Tags: Bio-ethics, Ethics, Nobel Prize, Shinya Yamanaka, Sir John B Gurdon, stem cell ethics, stem cell research
Posted in Features | Comments Off on A Nobel Prize for ethics?
Friday, October 19th, 2012
The future Blessed Pope John XXIII, born Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli’s vision stretched far, very far. Vatican II had to return to its evangelical roots and get rid of the shell that had built up around it over the centuries, driving it further and further away from its Master. “There will never be a Pius XIII”: to Read more
Tags: Catholic Church, Church, John XXIII, Pope John and renewal, Pope John XXIII, Renewal, Second Vatican Council, Vatican II
Posted in Features | Comments Off on Pope John XXIII’s ideal of renewal
Tuesday, October 16th, 2012
It is uncontroversial that the human brain has capabilities that are, in some respects, far superior to those of all other known objects in the cosmos. It is the only kind of object capable of understanding that the cosmos is even there, or why there are infinitely many prime numbers, or that apples fall because Read more
Tags: artificial general intelligence, Artificial intelligence, Charles Babbage, physics
Posted in Features | Comments Off on Artificial intelligence — possible, but delayed
Tuesday, October 16th, 2012
Anybody who’s seen the movie “Pulp Fiction” probably recalls the scene where John Travolta explains to Samuel L. Jackson that in France, McDonald’s calls the quarter-pounder a “Royale with cheese” because, in light of the metric system, the French wouldn’t know what a quarter-pounder is. (It turns out that the movie got the French slightly Read more
Tags: Africa, African bishops, Asia, Asian bishops, europe, European bishops, John L Allen Jr, Latin America, Latin American bishops, Synod of Bishops, US, US Bishops
Posted in Features | Comments Off on An Asian plea for humility at the Synod of Bishops
Friday, October 12th, 2012
The principal purpose for the Synod of Bishops, which commenced Oct. 7, is to study how the New Evangelization affects the mission of the Church. The Holy Father has asked the synod to study about “The New Evangelization for the Transmission of the Christian Faith.” As the theme indicates, the focus is on the “transmission” Read more
Tags: Catholic, Catholic Church, Church Tradition, Evangelization, Fr James Wehner, Holy Father, James Wehner, New Evangelization, Pope Benedict XVI, Synod, Synod of Bishops, Tradition
Posted in Features | Comments Off on The importance of the Synod and new evangelization
Friday, October 12th, 2012
The 25th Synod of Bishops began Sunday, this one dedicated to “The New Evangelization for the Transmission of the Christian Faith.” New evangelization is the apple of Pope Benedict XVI’s eye, so the synod, held every couple of years or so since 1967, is being touted by the Vatican, along with the Year of Faith Read more
Tags: Catholic Bishops, Catholic Church, Evangelisation, Evangelization, John L Allen Jr, New Evangelization, Pope Benedict XVI, Rome, Synod, Synod of Bishops, Vatican, Year of Faith
Posted in Features | Comments Off on Q&A on the synod for new evangelization
Tuesday, October 9th, 2012
Next time Professor Karen King receives an oblong scrap of papyrus with an explosive text and an owner wanting to remain in the shadows, she will probably pass. It is now more than likely that the “Jesus had a wife” manuscript, which she sensationally unveiled in Rome a couple of weeks ago, is a fake. Read more
Tags: fakes, Jesus wife, Jesus' wife papyrus, Karen King, papyrus, wife of Jesus
Posted in Features | Comments Off on The wife of Jesus and other fakes
Tuesday, October 9th, 2012
In the past few years a handful of children have deliberately taken their own lives, including one under 9. Kirsty Johnston reports on the unthinkable truth of pre-teen suicide. Krystal was 12 when she killed herself. The Auckland foster child had just had a violent argument with her 7-year-old sister over pocket money and both Read more
Tags: Child Youth and Family Services, CYF, CYFS, Kirsty Johnson, Krystal, pre-adolescent suicide, pre-teen suicide, Suicide, suicide in NZ, Teen suicide, Teenagers
Posted in Features | Comments Off on Gone too soon — pre-teen suicide in NZ
Friday, October 5th, 2012
Catholics have been arguing about the Second Vatican Council—about what it did and didn’t do, about what it meant and still means or what it never meant and could never mean—for half a century. Many reform-minded Catholics today are disappointed by what they see as a retreat, under the papacies of John Paul II and Read more
Tags: Catholic, Catholic Church, Pope Benedict XVI, Pope John Paul II, Second Vatican Council, Vatican, Vatican II, ways of being Catholic
Posted in Features | Comments Off on Vatican II continued
Friday, October 5th, 2012
On July 2, the Vatican announced that Pope Benedict XVI had appointed Bishop Gerhard Müller the new prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, arguably the most influential and prestigious of all the Vatican’s departments. The 64-year-old native of Mainz in central Germany was subsequently elevated to archbishop and made ex officio president of the Pontifical Read more
Tags: Cardinal Gerhard Müller, Catholic, Catholic Church, CDF, Church is not a fortress, Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Pope Benedict XVI
Posted in Features | Comments Off on Archbishop Gerhard Müller: ‘The Church is not a fortress’