St. Bernard of Clairvaux, pray for us!!
Saint Bernard of Clairvaux: Love Is Sufficient of Itself - Living Faith - Home & Family - Catholic Online
Book Review: Get Serious! by Father James Farfaglia is Highly Recommended - Books - Arts & Entertainment - Catholic Online
Caritas in Veritate - Pope Benedict XVI
70. Technological development can give rise to the idea that technology is  self-sufficient when too much attention is given to the “how” questions,  and not enough to the many “why” questions underlying human activity. For  this reason technology can appear ambivalent. Produced through human creativity  as a tool of personal freedom, technology can be understood as a manifestation  of absolute freedom, the freedom that seeks to prescind from the limits inherent  in things. The process of globalization could replace ideologies with  technology[152], allowing the latter to become an ideological power  that threatens to confine us within an a priori that holds us back from  encountering being and truth. Were that to happen, we would all know, evaluate  and make decisions about our life situations from within a technocratic cultural  perspective to which we would belong structurally, without ever being able to  discover a meaning that is not of our own making. The “technical” worldview that  follows from this vision is now so dominant that truth has come to be seen as  coinciding with the possible. But when the sole criterion of truth is efficiency  and utility, development is automatically denied. True development does not  consist primarily in “doing”. The key to development is a mind capable of  thinking in technological terms and grasping the fully human meaning of human  activities, within the context of the holistic meaning of the individual's  being. Even when we work through satellites or through remote electronic  impulses, our actions always remain human, an expression of our responsible  freedom. Technology is highly attractive because it draws us out of our physical  limitations and broadens our horizon. But human freedom is authentic only  when it responds to the fascination of technology with decisions that are the  fruit of moral responsibility. Hence the pressing need for formation in an  ethically responsible use of technology. Moving beyond the fascination that  technology exerts, we must reappropriate the true meaning of freedom, which is  not an intoxication with total autonomy, but a response to the call of being,  beginning with our own personal being.
 
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