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Angelus News | July 12, 2024 | Vol. 9 No. 14

On the cover: A PBS series recently suggested purgatory was the “invention” of 14th-century Italian poet Dante Alighieri. Could it be true? Does such a place — somewhere between heaven and hell — really exist? On Page 10, contributing editor Mike Aquilina details purgatory’s biblical roots in the Old and New Testaments, all of which point to the hope and forgiveness God promises “in the age to come” to believers.

On the cover: A PBS series recently suggested purgatory was the “invention” of 14th-century Italian poet Dante Alighieri. Could it be true? Does such a place — somewhere between heaven and hell — really exist? On Page 10, contributing editor Mike Aquilina details purgatory’s biblical roots in the Old and New Testaments, all of which point to the hope and forgiveness God promises “in the age to come” to believers.

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NOW PLAYING INSIDE OUT 2<br />

WHEN ANXIETY<br />

WANTS A WELCOME<br />

For all its rave reviews, ‘Inside Out 2’ risks<br />

reducing our problems to an imbalance of<br />

emotions. Faith tells us the truth is deeper.<br />

Maya Hawke as “Anxiety” in<br />

“Inside Out 2.” | IMDB<br />

BY JOSEPH JOYCE<br />

The human mind is like a<br />

telescope: perfect for observing<br />

everything but itself. Quantum<br />

physics is grade-school homework<br />

compared to decoding the difficulty<br />

of asking out a girl who is interested<br />

in you — scientists would pool their<br />

<strong>No</strong>bel Prize money for a way to crack<br />

that particular nut.<br />

To put it another way: Each generation<br />

has its own metaphor to explain<br />

why, for all our intelligence, we<br />

remain such hot messes. Humors,<br />

icebergs, Greek kings, even a ridiculous<br />

thing called “neurons.” Today’s<br />

artificial intelligence experts insist the<br />

brain is a computer, but anecdotal<br />

evidence suggests the brain remains<br />

far more capable at spotting stop signs<br />

in a photo.<br />

Pixar’s latest creation, “Inside Out 2,”<br />

has found its own symbol of psyche<br />

pertinent to our moment: the work<br />

committee.<br />

Like the 2015 original, “Inside Out<br />

2” (released in theaters June <strong>14</strong>) depicts<br />

each person as governed by five<br />

personified emotions: Joy, Sadness,<br />

Anger, Disgust, and Fear, who operate<br />

at a command center inside the<br />

brain. Peering through your eyes, they<br />

determine the appropriate emotional<br />

response and catalog memories from<br />

those experiences. Those memories<br />

form a tree like Sense of Self, the<br />

manifestation of one’s belief system.<br />

This brain belongs to Riley, a<br />

13-year-old girl recently moved to San<br />

Francisco from Minnesota. Like most<br />

26 • ANGELUS • <strong>July</strong> <strong>12</strong>, <strong>2024</strong>

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