The Existence of God - Nature of Reality Flashcards
1
Q
What are the 4 main arguments for the existence of God?
A
- Anthropic Principle
- Design Argument
- First cause/ cosmological argument
- Moral Argument
2
Q
What is the design argument?
A
- The world is too complex and intelligently designed for human life that it cannot have happened by coincidence and a chain of random events
- An intelligent being: God, must have designed it
- William Paley (1743-1805) - used the example of the complexity of a watch.
3
Q
What did John Stuart Mill say?
A
- Disagreed with Paley
- Cruelty is part of natural order, e.g. predator-prey, natural disasters
- This is seen as a bad design
- Therefore if God existed, he would be a cruel God
- He argued that people can’t or won’t want to worship an evil God.
4
Q
What is the anthropic principle?
A
- F.R Tennant
- Argued that the universe is so perfectly structured it ensured life would be present.
- Argued that evolution was because of God - evolution has a purpose, to develop complex life forms, they become more intelligent and morally aware, showed evolution was guided by God.
5
Q
What is the first cause argument?
A
- Thomas Aquinas
- Every event has a cause
- Cosmological argument suggests the universe must have a cause
- God is the first cause, who has no cause, but causes all things including time and space. Because he is the first cause, he is eternal and unchanging.
6
Q
What is the moral argument (John Newman)?
A
- When humans do sin, they feel guilt which is God speaking through their conscience teaching them good from bad. God helps people see right from wrong
- Some ignore their conscience due to free will
- God’s voice within us reminded us that we are responsible to him.
- Humans would not know right from wrong without God.
7
Q
What was Immanuel Kant’s argument?
A
- Humans know what to do in any situation with a moral dilemma
- Even if they try to do a good thing, they may not get rewarded in life.
- Therefore, a fair God must exist to reward humans in an afterlife when they haven’t been rewarded in this world.
- Believing in God and justice after death is why humans live a good life.
8
Q
What was John Hick’s argument?
A
- Life behaviour was linked to death, suffering and evil is a lesson and an opportunity for learning,
- He said that people would become more like God through learning, perfect.
- After death this process would continue.
- Some Christians reject this argument as it doesn’t fit with God judging them.