Frases de Pierre Teilhard De Chardin
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Pierre Teilhard de Chardin foi um padre jesuíta, teólogo, filósofo e paleontólogo francês que tentou construir uma visão integradora entre ciência e teologia. Através de suas obras, legou para a sua posteridade uma filosofia que reconcilia a ciência do mundo material com as forças sagradas do divino e sua teologia. Disposto a desfazer o mal entendido entre a ciência e a religião, conseguiu ser mal visto pelos representantes de ambas. Muitos colegas cientistas negaram o valor científico de sua obra, acusando-a de vir carregada de um misticismo e de uma linguagem estranha à ciência. Do lado da Igreja Católica, por sua vez, foi proibido de lecionar, de publicar suas obras teológicas e submetido a um quase exílio na China.

"Aparentemente, a Terra Moderna nasceu de um movimento anti-religioso. O Homem bastando-se a si mesmo. A Razão substituindo-se à Crença. Nossa geração e as duas precedentes quase só ouviram falar de conflito entre Fé e Ciência. A tal ponto que pôde parecer, a certa altura, que esta era decididamente chamada a tomar o lugar daquela. Ora, à medida que a tensão se prolonga, é visivelmente sob uma forma muito diferente de equilíbrio – não eliminação, nem dualidade, mas síntese – que parece haver de se resolver o conflito."

✵ 1. Maio 1881 – 10. Abril 1955
Pierre Teilhard De Chardin photo
Pierre Teilhard De Chardin: 67   citações 2   Curtidas

Pierre Teilhard De Chardin Frases famosas

Pierre Teilhard De Chardin: Frases em inglês

“At the heart of our universe, each soul exists for God, in our Lord.”

The Divinisation of Our Activities, p. 56
The Divine Milieu (1960)

“The future is more beautiful than all the pasts.”

Letter (5 September 1919), in The Making of a Mind: Letters from a Soldier-Priest 1914–1919

“We are like soldiers who fall during the assault which leads to peace.”

The Divinisation of Our Activities, p. 85
The Divine Milieu (1960)

“However convergent it be, evolution cannot attain to fulfilment on earth except through a point of dissociation. With this we are introduced to a fantastic and inevitable event which now begins to take shape in our perspective, the event which comes nearer with every day that passes: the end of all life on our globe, the death of the planet, the ultimate phase of the phenomenon of man. …
Now when sufficient elements have sufficiently agglomerated, this essentially convergent movement will attain such intensity and such quality that mankind, taken as a whole, will be obliged—as happened to the individual forces of instinct—to reflect upon itself at a single point; that is to say, in this case, to abandon its organo-planetary foothold so as to shift its centre on to the transcendent centre of its increasing concentration. This will be the end and the fulfilment of the spirit of the earth.
The end of the world: the wholesale internal introversion upon itself of the noosphere, which has simultaneously reached the uttermost limit of its complexity and its centrality.
The end of the world: the overthrow of equilibrium, detaching the mind, fulfilled at last, from its material matrix, so that it will henceforth rest with all its weight on God-Omega. …
Are we to foresee man seeking to fulfil himself collectively upon himself, or personally on a greater than himself? Refusal or acceptance of Omega? … Universal love would only vivify and detach finally a fraction of the noosphere so as to consummate it—the part which decided to "cross the threshold", to get outside itself into the other. …
The death of the materially exhausted planet; the split of the noosphere, divided on the form to be given to its unity; and simultaneously (endowing the event with all its significance and with all its value) the liberation of that percentage of the universe which, across time, space and evil, will have succeeded in laboriously synthesising itself to the very end. Not an indefinite progress, which is an hypothesis contradicted by the convergent nature of noogenesis, but an ecstasy transcending the dimensions and the framework of the visible universe.”

Pierre Teilhard De Chardin livro The Phenomenon of Man

pp. 273, 287–289 https://archive.org/stream/ThePhenomenonOfMan/phenomenon-of-man-pierre-teilhard-de-chardin#page/n137/mode/1up/,
The Phenomenon of Man (1955)

“The world can no more have two summits than a circumference can have two centres.”

Epilogue, In Expectation of the Parousia, p. 154
The Divine Milieu (1960)

“Mankind is now caught up, as though in a train of gears, at the heart of a continually accelerating vortex of self-totalisation”

Man's Place in Nature https://archive.org/stream/MansPlaceInNature/Mans_Place_in_Nature#page/n101/mode/2up (1966), p. 100

“God is inexhaustibly attainable in the totality of our action.”

The Divinisation of Our Activities, p. 63
The Divine Milieu (1960)

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