hiya,

1. Dignity of the Human Person 

Belief in the inherent dignity of the human person is the foundation of all 
Catholic social teaching. Human life is sacred, and the dignity of the human 
person is the starting point for a moral vision for society. This principle is 
grounded in the idea that the person is made in the image of God. The person is 
the clearest reflection of God among us.  See selected quotations.

gav: dignity...i am not sure this is the word i would choose...the word has 
rather pretentious connotations sometimes...but this is a minor balk. i would 
say that 'human life is sacred...' is a problem sentence though. 
anthropomorphism, simply. 'life is sacred' full stop.

2. Common Good and Community

The human person is both sacred and social. We realize our dignity and rights 
in relationship with others, in community. Human beings grow and achieve 
fulfillment in community. Human dignity can only be realized and protected in 
the context of relationships with the wider society. 

How we organize our society -- in economics and politics, in law and policy -- 
directly affects human dignity and the capacity of individuals to grow in 
community. The obligation to "love our neighbor" has an individual dimension, 
but it also requires a broader social commitment. Everyone has a responsibility 
to contribute to the good of the whole society, to the common good. See 
selected quotations.

gav: do we need to separate the social and sacred? is this sacred/profane 
division not emblematic of the general western psychopathology - ie alienation?
the obligation to 'love they neighbour' is only necessary when the social is 
viewed as separate from the sacred. if the social is seen as sacred then the 
obligation dissolves into a natural tendency, a fait accompli.

3. Option for the Poor

The moral test of a society is how it treats its most vulnerable members. The 
poor have the most urgent moral claim on the conscience of the nation. We are 
called to look at public policy decisions in terms of how they affect the poor. 
The "option for the poor," is not an adversarial slogan that pits one group or 
class against another. Rather it states that the deprivation and powerlessness 
of the poor wounds the whole community.

The option for the poor is an essential part of society's effort to achieve the 
common good. A healthy community can be achieved only if its members give 
special attention to those with special needs, to those who are poor and on the 
margins of society.  See selected quotations.

gav:rich and poor = the classic capitalistic dichotomy. recognising the poor as 
a category in need presupposes the validity of the dichotomy and perpetuates 
it. a radical social shift needs to undermine these false divisions in order to 
realise community proper.

4. Rights and Responsibilities

Human dignity can be protected and a healthy community can be achieved only if 
human rights are protected and responsibilities are met. Every person has a 
fundamental right to life and a right to those things required for human 
decency – starting with food, shelter and clothing, employment, health care, 
and education. Corresponding to these rights are duties and responsibilities -- 
to one another, to our families, and to the larger society.  
See selected quotations.

gav: my only criticism here is that it presents the situation in an economic 
manner. i buy my rights by fulfilling my responsibilities so to speak. the 
arbitration of this exchange opens the door for rules and rulers, potentially. 
if my integration within my community and the natural world is maintained 
through the mythic imagination then the mythopoetics, the lore implicit in the 
stories that give my life meaning, ensure a harmonious social-individual 
relationship, without recourse to explicit law or regulation.

5.Role of Government and Subsidiarity 

The state has a positive moral function. It is an instrument to promote human 
dignity, protect human rights, and build the common good. All people have a 
right and a responsibility to participate in political institutions so that 
government can achieve its proper goals. 

The principle of subsidiarity holds that the functions of government should be 
performed at the lowest level possible, as long as they can be performed 
adequately. When the needs in question cannot adequately be met at the lower 
level, then it is not only necessary, but imperative that higher levels of 
government intervene.  See selected quotations on the role of government and 
subsidiarity.

gav: as lao-tse elegantly demonstrated the best ruler is the one that can let 
people run their own affairs. he becomes invisible. 
the principle of subsidiarity seems sound and seems to reinforce the value of 
self-sustainability: ie the functions of govt devolve to the individual and 
community, and where greater co-ordination is required, it is achieved through 
a bottom up co-ordination rather than a top-down administration.

6. Economic Justice  

The economy must serve people, not the other way around. All workers have a 
right to productive work, to decent and fair wages, and to safe working 
conditions. They also have a fundamental right to organize and join unions. 
People have a right to economic initiative and private property, but these 
rights have limits. No one is allowed to amass excessive wealth when others 
lack the basic necessities of life.

Catholic teaching opposes collectivist and statist economic approaches. But it 
also rejects the notion that a free market automatically produces justice. 
Distributive justice, for example, cannot be achieved by relying entirely on 
free market forces. Competition and free markets are useful elements of 
economic systems. However, markets must be kept within limits, because there 
are many needs and goods that cannot be satisfied by the market system. It is 
the task of the state and of all society to intervene and ensure that these 
needs are met. See selected quotations on markets, workers rights, and labor 
vs. capital

gav: the capitalist system is fundamentally flawed and intimately related to 
the problems of alienation and environmental destruction. we cannot use the 
earth as a bottomless resource and tip, nor can we promote greed as a social 
value. the primacy of money, of the economic paradigm itself, must end if we 
are to live sustainably. 

7. Stewardship of God's Creation 

The goods of the earth are gifts from God, and they are intended by God for the 
benefit of everyone. There is a "social mortgage" that guides our use of the 
world's goods, and we have a responsibility to care for these goods as stewards 
and trustees, not as mere consumers and users. How we treat the environment is 
a measure of our stewardship, a sign of our respect for the Creator.  See 
selected quotations

gav: a view stained with the corruptive lens of the economic paradigm, once 
more. the world is not a storehouse of goods for the benefit of everyone, the 
earth is a symbiotic superintelligence, of which we are an integral part. when 
the earth is inseparable from yourself what need of any 'social mortgage'?

8. Promotion of Peace and Disarmament

Catholic teaching promotes peace as a positive, action-oriented concept. In the 
words of Pope John Paul II, "Peace is not just the absence of war. It involves 
mutual respect and confidence between peoples and nations. It involves 
collaboration and binding agreements.” There is a close relationship in 
Catholic teaching between peace and justice. Peace is the fruit of justice and 
is dependent upon right order among human beings.
See selected quotations.

gav: apart from the inherent hypocrisy of the catholic church talking about 
justice and peace (not exactly paragons of virtue on either count), the phrase 
'right order' sounds a little fascist to me...but maybe i am just paranoid.
 
9. Participation 

All people have a right to participate in the economic, political, and cultural 
life of society. It is a fundamental demand of justice and a requirement for 
human dignity that all people be assured a minimum level of participation in 
the community. It is wrong for a person or a group to be excluded unfairly or 
to be unable to participate in society. See selected quotations. 

gav: spectacular. the situationists railed against the compartmentalistaion of 
life (work, leisure etc), being especially pissed off at the idea of 
art/culture as some sort of socially sanctioned spectacular experience rather 
than life in its totality. 
the sits were on about life as a continual flowing series of  open-ended 
situations of which the individual is an integral part. perpetual participation 
(in life) or none at all, there is no middle ground here. there is only a 
spectacular (SOM) or integrated (MOQ) view of existence

10. Global Solidarity and Development

We are one human family. Our responsibilities to each other cross national, 
racial, economic and ideological differences. We are called to work globally 
for justice. Authentic development must be full human development. It must 
respect and promote personal, social, economic, and political rights, including 
the rights of nations and of peoples It must avoid the extremists of 
underdevelopment on the one hand, and "superdevelopment" on the other. 
Accumulating material goods, and technical resources will be unsatisfactory and 
debasing if there is no respect for the moral, cultural, and spiritual 
dimensions of the person. See selected quotations. 

gav: anthropomorphic again.
an aside: it is the shaman's role to mediate between the human world - his 
community/tribe - and the non-human world, to ensure harmonious relationship 
twixt the two. we can be fully human only in connexion with each other AND all 
other (non-human) forms. we must stop separating the human from the earth...it 
is an illogical and damaging myopia.
we are one family - gaia. gaian consciousness (the goddess) is (re-)inserting 
herself into the collective psyche to re-equilibrate our paternally weighted 
weltanschaaung.
another aside:
just watched 'into the wild' - kinda relevant. the spirit of 
being-in-the-world, of freedom, of belonging....and the danger of extremes...



--- On Mon, 28/7/08, Stephen Hannon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> From: Stephen Hannon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: [MD]  Social Level- Catholic Social Teaching
> To: "MOQ Discuss" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Received: Monday, 28 July, 2008, 4:21 AM
> Hi all,
> 
> I thought it would be interesting to take a look at how one
> group of
> people (Catholics) look at social level values.  Is there
> any parallel
> to social values we usually discuss?  What are the
> overarching
> intellectual values/ideals driving these social teachings?
> 
> http://www.osjspm.org/major_themes.aspx
> 
> Peace,
> Stephen
> Moq_Discuss mailing list
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