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ADDRESS OF HIS
HOLINESS JOHN PAUL II TO THE PARTICIPANTS OF THE STUDY WEEK OF THE
PONTIFICAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
Friday, 26
September 1986
Mr President, Ladies and Gentlemen,
1. THE PRESENT Study Week on Persistent Meteo-Oceanographic Anomalies and
Teleconnections offers a fresh proof of the intention of the Pontifical Academy
of Sciences to be of service to humanity, especially by its interest in the main
scientific problems of the day. The theme of your Symposium is in fact one of
the most urgent at the present time.
I extend a most cordial greeting to the eminent specialists in the fundamental
oceanographic and atmospheric problems that you are dealing with. I am pleased
to see that you come from many different parts of the world: from North and
South America, Europe and Asia. This is yet another demonstration of the
harmonious collaboration that exists between scientists and that is of such
benefit to world peace.
2. Science does not merely have to study natural phenomena in themselves. It
also has to make a decisive intellectual and ethical effort to foresee the
development and consequences of those phenomena, in order to safeguard and
enhance the welfare of humanity. This is the aim that you have set yourselves.
You have been studying phenomena such as E1 Niño, the monsoons and their
world-wide effects, the causes of the climatic disturbances in the eastern zones
of the Pacific Ocean, as well as the prolonged drought in the Sahel.
The studies which you have carried out in the Institutes which you represent
individually and which you have been dealing with in the tranquil surroundings
of the Casina of Pius IV, the seat of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, will
enable you to provide those who are threatened by these and other negative
phenomena with timely weather forecasts, thus making it possible to take the
necessary steps for avoiding the most serious effects of approaching natural
disasters. In various parts of the world it is now possible, as a result of
dedicated efforts, to set up systems for recording climatic phenomena and to
gather facts on a world-wide scale which affect the entire globe.
3. Through your work you are carrying out the Biblical command to subdue the
earth, to control the catastrophes that harm the human family, and to make the
earth obedient to our service. Science encourages legitimate human curiosity to
know the universe and to admire and contemplate its beauty and goodness. In this
way we enter into communion with God himself, who looked upon what he had
created and saw that it was very good. But we are also called by God to control
the movements of violence and death that occur in nature, subject as it is to
inevitable adjustments of its balance. We are called to discover new sources of
energy, to replace those that are nonrenewable or that prove to be insufficient.
Unfortunately it sometimes happens that, in order to satisfy his unlimited
craving for material well-being, man corrupts and squanders the world’s
resources, with effects that are especially harmful to those least able to
defend themselves, who possess the fewest technical skills, and who inhabit the
least hospitable territories.
You, on the other hand, are engaged in the genuine task of the scientist: you
are studying in order to contemplate and understand, to control and make
fruitful. In the course of your studies, you cannot fail to admire the powerful
forces of nature. But at the same time you see that these forces can pose
dangers and threats to humanity, and you teach how to dominate them, so that
they may be placed at the service of all.
4. Ladies and Gentlemen, I am particularly grateful to the Pontifical Academy of
Sciences and to its President for bringing you together. I invoke upon you the
blessings of God, the Provident Creator, for the studies that you are engaged
upon for securing a harmonious environmental balance, which will favour human
security and dignity, and which will especially benefit those who are unprepared
and defenceless in the face of natural catastrophes.
© Copyright 1986 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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