Hyacinthe de Valroger explained

Hyacinthe de Valroger, CO (6 January 1814, at Caen  - 10 October 1876), was a French Catholic priest and Oratorian.

Career

As a young man, Valroger first studied medicine, but later entered the seminary and was ordained a priest in 1837, after which he made Director of the minor seminary of Bayeux. In 1847 he became a titular canon of Bayeux Cathedral. In 1852 he joined Joseph Gratry in the work of restoring the French Oratory, where he became professor of theology, Master of novices and assistant Superior General.

De Valroger believed that the theory of evolution could be reconciled with the Book of Genesis. He was critical of Darwinism but did not entirely reject evolution. He has been described as a "theistic vitalist".[1]

He criticized natural theories of the origin of life. He embraced a spiritual theory of spontaneous generation. He argued against the idea of abiogenesis, claiming that there was an intervention of "intelligence" (which he equated with God) acting upon the organization of living matter.[2]

Selected publications

Besides many articles in Catholic reviews he published:

Notes and References

  1. Anonymous. (1874). Review: La Genèse des Espèces. The Dublin Review, Volume 74. p. 498
  2. Seckbach, Joseph. (2009). Divine Action and Natural Selection: Science, Faith, and Evolution. World Scientific Publishing. pp. 265-267.