Arguments for the Existence of God Flashcards
What is an inductive argument?
An argument based on observation of regularities; an argument where the truth of the premises does not guarantee the truth of the conclusion
What is a deductive argument?
An argument based on logical connections; an argument where the truth of the premises guarantees the truth of the conclusion
What is a priori knowledge?
Knowledge that is available to us before any sense experience
What is a posteriori knowledge?
Knowledge that is gained as a result of experience
Which scholar is associated with the analogical (design) argument?
William Paley
What is Paley’s analogical argument?
1) When we see something which has signs of design (purpose/complexity), we assume a designer - e.g. a watch implies a watchmaker
2) The universe is far more complex than a watch and therefore implies an infinitely complex and intelligent designer
3) This designer must be God
What is the name of Paley’s book, containing the design argument?
Natural Theology
Which two things are found on the heath in Paley’s analogy?
A rock and a watch
Give an example of design in the world that Paley uses to prove the existence of God
Features of animals and humans - eyes, bones, digestive system, blood vessels etc.; adaptations which show species are suited to their environments and that God compensates for lacks (e.g. trunk on elephants make up for short neck, spiders’ ability to spin web); physical laws governing the planets that make life possible
What manmade device does Paley compare the human eye to and why?
Telescope - designed by intelligent humans but modelled upon the eye; the eye is even more complex as it is able to adjust to different conditions (light/dark)
Is Paley’s argument inductive or deductive?
Inductive - it is a best inference based on the observations Paley has made of nature
Does Paley argue a posteriori or a priori?
A posteriori - he makes his argument after observing regularities in the natural world
What is the name of Hume’s work that critiques the Design and Cosmological arguments?
Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion
How does Hume present his criticisms of the Design and Cosmological Arguments?
Dialogue form - characters having a debate
What analogy do the characters in Hume’s dialogue use to present the Design Argument?
A house
How does Hume criticise the Design Argument?
1) Problems with analogy - the two things being compared must be similar
2) Anthropocentrism - we assume God must be like a human designer, but spiders making a design argument might imagine God to be spider-like, spinning universes out of instinct rather than purpose
3) Why not a team of designers? A house would have multiple builders
4) Problem of Evil - there are problems with the design which suggests a designer who is not omnipotent/omnibenevolent
Give a strength of the Design Argument
1) It is based on evidence which is readily available to most people; many people feel awe and wonder at the natural world
2) Many religious believers still appeal to arguments from probability similar to Paley’s - due to the low probability of life developing in the universe, the fact we are here is evidence God created the universe (fine-tuning)
Give a weakness of the Design Argument
1) Paley made his argument before Darwin’s theory of natural selection. We now understand why the world is full of apparent purpose and complexity - evolution selects for traits which best adapt to the environment
2) Against the argument from probability, it can be argued that it is not “unbelievable” that we are here, as all unlikely events will happen at some point in an infinite universe and we are biased in that we are the ones observing them (anthropic principle)