God: Basics Flashcards
What is the meaning of God being omniscient, omnipotent, and omnibenevolent?
Omniscient: God knows all truths
Omnipotent: God can do everything
Omnibenevolent: God is morally perfect
What does it mean if God is eternal or everlasting?
Eternal: God exists outside all of time
Everlasting: God exists inside all of time
What is the paradox of the stone?
There cannot be an omnipotent being because there will always be something that it can’t do: either it can’t make a stone it can’t lift, or it can make the stone but can’t lift it
What is the Euthyphro dilemma?
There cannot be an omnibenevolent being because there’s problems with both ways of understanding this:
If God decided what’s good, this would be random and could change
If God didn’t decide what’s good, it would be outside of God’s control
What is the compatibility, or otherwise, of the existence of an omniscient God and free human beings argument?
If God knows everything he knows what I will do. And because God can’t be wrong, I can’t do anything else and so I am not free
What is moral evil and natural evil?
Moral evil is suffering caused by free human beings e.g. murder
Natural evil is suffering caused by nature e.g. a tsunami flattening a town
What are the logical and evidential forms of the problem of evil?
Logical: If God exists, God would stop evil because God is all powerful, all knowing, and all good. But evil exists. So God cannot exist
Evidential: If God exists, it’s likely we’d know about a good reason to explain evil. But we don’t, so it’s likely God doesn’t exist
What is Plantinga’s Free Will Defence response to the logical problem of evil?
The logical problem of evil fails - a good God would not stop evil because evil is the result of our free will which is valuable
What is Hick’s soul-making response to the logical problem of evil?
The evidential problem of evil fails - there is a good reason for evil, which is that we need evil in the world to develop morally and to have a proper relationship with God
What is the design argument from analogy (as presented by Hume)?
Human objects (e.g. a telescope) are ordered because they were designed
Natural objects (e.g. the eye) are ordered, so it’s likely they were also designed
The designer of nature is God
So God exists
What is Paley’s design argument: argument from spatial order/purpose?
Natural objects are ordered (e.g. the eye) and so they must have been designed
This designer must be God. So God exists
What is Swinburne’s design argument: argument from temporal order/regularity?
The universe is ordered by the laws of nature
These can’t be explained by science, so the best explanation is that an intelligent being designed them
This intelligent being is God
So God exists
What is Hume’s objection to the design argument from analogy?
Human objects are actually quite different to nature e.g. human objects don’t reproduce but nature does
So just because human objects have a designer, it doesn’t make it likely that nature has a designer
What is the problem of spatial disorder (as posed by Hume and Paley)?
If God designed the universe, it would all be ordered
But some parts of the universe (like a jungle or eyes that do not perform their function) are disordered
So we can’t say God exists and designed the universe
What is the argument that the design argument fails as it is an argument from a unique case (Hume)?
We can only say how something was made if we have seen lots of things like it and seen how they were made
With the universe we have not seen lots of things like it because there is only one universe (UNIverse!)
So we can’t say how it was made and can’t say it was designed