The Importance Of Natural Law

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We often go through life trying to decipher between right and wrong. We strive to go down the right path. Our conscience allows us to do so and is often our guide towards the fulfillment of a moral life. Our conscience is a part of us that is so intertwined with God that it allows us to do according to His law. Although, God 's law (aka external law) is only known by God, he has revealed some parts of it through our ability to reason. This is known as natural law. This natural law tells us what is right and wrong and it is our conscience that helps us to use this law daily. Without it, we would be unable to do good, it is our ultimate guide having been shaped by the teachings of the Church, personal experiences, history and so forth. Especially …show more content…

As a scientist, this breakthrough would have been astonishing and profoundly interesting in it’s complexity. It must have been, what at the time, seemed like a once in a lifetime opportunity that would have an incredible impact on the world and future scientific discoveries. On the other-hand, as a conscious human being he would have had to stop to ask himself if that was the kind of impact he wanted his work to have. As a man who was constantly thinking, it only makes sense to me that this was a decision that he had pondered for days on end. I believe that he eventually came to the conclusion that Pervez Hoodbhoy had stated in the short film The Strangest Dream; as a scientist he had a responsibility to society. It is scientific research and inventions that shape the world. God has granted scientists, and all people for that matter, the power to impact the world. For this reason, we should all use that God given power to better the world, not destroy it. In continuing with this project, he would be using his work to negatively impact society and thus going against that responsibility he had as an ethical scientist. I think that once he realized this he knew what he had to do, despite how much it would pain him, he listened to his conscience and

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