The Design Argument Flashcards
What is the Design Argument also called?
“Argument from design”
“The intelligent design argument”
“The analogical design argument”
“The Teleological Design”
There is also a modern version of the argument called the “fine-tuning argument”
Who created the Design Argument?
William Paley
Who was William Paley?
A Christian philosopher
He studied mathematics at Christ’s College in Cambridge and stayed there to become a gifted lecturer, focusing on philosophy and theology.
When and why did Paley leave university?
In 1780, Paley left university to become a vicar
When did Paley write his book?
In 1802, Paley wrote “Natural Theology”
What influenced Paley?
Aristotle’s teleology (end, goal or purpose)
Aquinas’ own design argument
Christian tradition of “Natural Theology”
What is Aristotle’s teleology and how did it influence Paley?
Aristotle believed that everything had a “telos” meaning end, goal or purpose.
Paley then applied this to his Design argument and argued that the end, goal and purpose of his argument is to prove God’s existence.
What is Aquinas’ Design argument and how did it influence Paley?
Aquinas creates 5 simple arguments for the existence of God.
Paley used this argument and has adapted it into a modern version
What is the Christian view of “Natural Theology” and how did it influence Paley?
This is the view that questions God’s existence, nature and attributes can be answered by using reason, science, history and observation.
What type of argument is Paley’s design argument?
Analogical
Inductive
A Posteriori
What is analogical argument?
An argument that works by an analogy
What is an analogy?
An inference where information or meaning is transferred from one subject to another
Analogies are metaphors used in an argument
What is an inductive argument?
Inductive reasoning is where we
use premises to supply strong evidence for the truth of the conclusion.
Inductive arguments are probabilistic meaning they cannot be 100% proved.
What is an a posteriori argument?
An posteriori argument is based on sense experience; we observe the world through touch, taste, hearing, smell and sight, and we draw conclusions from what our senses tell us.
How does Paley introduce the design argument?
Using a long analogy of the watch
Summarize the watch analogy
When on a walk, a man “pitched his foot against a stone” and came to the conclusion that the stone “had lain there forever”
But suppose he had came across a watch, unlike his previous answer for the stone, the watch may have been placed there.
When observing this watch, he noticed that “several parts are framed and put together for a purpose” implying that every tick, every hand and every cog has been designed specifically by designers.
That designer being God
How does the watch analogy link into the existence of God?
The watch represents the universe meaning every detail of the world, every specific characteristic suggests that the world has been designed, created especially for humanity and must have been created by a “designer” that designer being God. Therefore he exists.
What is P1 of the design argument and why is it true?
Some objects in the world exhibit complexity, regularity and purpose.
It’s true because everything has a purpose such as our bodies; its purpose is to reproduce