The Recovery of Reason
Here is the opening of George Neumayr's editorial in the November 2011 issue of Catholic World Report:
The most robust defense of reason today comes not from academics and politicians but from the papacy. At a time of growing skepticism and relativism, Pope Benedict XVI stands almost alone in reason's defense.
In his 2006 Regensburg lecture, he guarded reason against two types of foes: extremists from the East who push a distorted faith without reason and secularists from the West who advance a distorted reason without faith.
His September 22 speech to the German parliament in Berlin marks another signal contribution to the vindication of reason. This time Pope Benedict was addressing legislators who have abandoned the full range of reason as the basis for law and rely instead on a cramped and fashionable relativism. Over 50 German lawmakers boycotted the speech, providing an unwitting punctuation mark to the Pope's call for the need to restore reason to politics.
The relativism of the majority is a dangerous foundation on which to base the state, the Pope argued. Without leaders who exercise reason's grasp of the natural law, on which human rights and justice absolutely depend, the state becomes nothing more than an expression of arbitrary power:
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