Cooking Up a Healthy Portion of Conscience
National Catholic Register (Oct
0-22, 2011)
Reproduced with permission
One of the most misunderstood of all Church
teachings is her doctrine on the nature and
operation of conscience.
This is most unfortunate because of the supreme
importance that conscience plays in the moral life.
The best and most thorough treatment on the
subject, as far as I am aware, appears in Karol
Wojtyla'sThe Acting Person.
Now, this book, which is a work of a remarkably
gifted intellect, is, by common consensus,
exceedingly difficult to read. Nonetheless,
philosophy teachers are happy to play the role of
intermediaries, building bridges between
inaccessible texts and hungry students.
Consider cooking, which is also performed in the
service of the hungry. A cook must first line up all
his ingredients before he puts them together and
prepares his gourmet dish. If he omits the ice
cream, he cannot produce Baked Alaska; if he omits
the eggs, he cannot produce Crêpes Suzette.
A good cook is faithful to his recipe; his recipe
is nothing more than mixing all the ingredients
together in the proper way. What, then, is the
recipe for conscience? To begin, let us line up the
ingredients, so to speak, that go into conscience,
being careful not to omit any of them. What are the
ingredients, then, that Wojtyla uses in cooking up
his description of conscience?
First, there is freedom, then knowledge, truth,
rightness, obligation and creativity.
Freedom is an essential requirement for
conscience. We act from a center of personal
subjectivity. When I think or act, it is I who
thinks or acts. But the very word"conscience" (con +
scientia), which means, by derivation, "with
knowledge,"must link the subject with the objective
order. This knowledge, however, is not mere factual
knowledge like 2 + 2 = 4 or Paris is the capital of
France. It is knowledge of the truth of what is
known.
As John Paul II, Wojtyla refers to truth as
possessing a certain luminosity (Veritatis
Splendor, The Splendor of Truth), which makes it
a natural and highly accessible object of the mind.
In perceiving this truth, one immediately gains a
sense of its rightness or, even, its goodness.
As Wojtyla avers, "Truthfulness and duty are
strictly concomitant."A mother holds her baby in her
arms and perceives its rightness and goodness. This
realization then gives rise to the duty or
obligation to protect what she perceives. (Do good
and avoid evil is the first principle of
conscience.)
When we freely accept our duty or obligation, we
become more complete as moral persons. Hence, we
recognize the creative element of acting in
accordance with our conscience. It is a commonplace
misunderstanding of freedom that it is something
negative and somehow becomes more itself to the
degree that it is separated from knowledge. This is
"freedom from" and is not the kind of freedom that
Wojtyla is discussing.
Rather, by "freedom"he means"freedom in," more
specifically, freedom in the truth, since it is the
truth that makes us free in the positive and
perfective sense.
A practical illustration may be helpful: I am
locked out of my house. My house key is on a
keychain together with a host of other keys. I am
free to try any of the wrong keys, but none of them
will allow me to do what I want to do, which is to
unlock the door and gain entrance into my house.
This negative freedom has no practical utility, and
there is no point in boasting that I am free to try
any of the wrong keys.
Such rebellious freedom is perfectly impractical.
By using the one true key to the lock, I enjoy
freedom in truth and get in the house. Another
common misconception is that conscience can operate
alone, apart from objective truth. But conscience
does not create truth, but discovers it. In this
way, the proper activity of the conscience does not
close us in on ourselves, but opens us to an
objective order, a world of values that enable us to
serve others effectively.
As Wojtyla states: "The opinion that man's
individual conscience could itself establish this
order [the original sin of Adam] distorts the
correct proportions in the relations between the
person and the society, community and - on a
different level - between the human creature and the
Creator."
Because conscience is linked with truth and
consequently rightness, it inspires obligation. In
this way, we establish our proper relationships with
ourselves, our neighbors and God. Conscience allows
us freedom to be ourselves and take our rightful
places in the world. And, in doing so, we gain an
even greater freedom: the freedom of personal
fulfillment.
Conscience is a kind of network builder. We are,
of course, free to use our freedom wrongly. But
there is no profit in pursuing this kind of negative
exercise. By employing all the elements
(ingredients) of conscience, we follow a recipe that
produces a more complete person. We must be ever
careful not to omit any of the ingredients.
The cook's gourmet meal will always contain all
of its vital ingredients. Nothing less is demanded
of conscience.