Religious Language as cognitive, but meaningless

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
© Michael Lacewing A priori knowledge Michael Lacewing
Advertisements

Empiricism on a priori knowledge
Verificationism and religious language Michael Lacewing
What do you see? According to logical positivism, do your statements have meaning? What do you see? According to logical positivism, do your statements.
Religious Language Michael Lacewing
1 From metaphysics to logical positivism The metaphysician tells us that empirical truth-conditions [for metaphysical terms] cannot be specified; if he.
Task: Take a look at the following statements: “I am the bread of life” “I am the true vine” “I am the way, the truth and the life” “I am the resurrection.
This is the beginning of the “The Jabberwocky” by Lewis Carrol.
Epistemology revision Responses: add a ‘no false lemmas’ condition (J+T+B+N) Responses: replace ‘justified’ with ‘reliably formed’ (R+T+B) (reliabilism)
Introduction to Ethics Lecture 6 Ayer and Emotivism By David Kelsey.
Religious Language Speaking about God Part 1. Why Religious language? The concept of a God is: Something other Something timeless We talk of things using.
Is there a rational basis for the belief in God..
Michael Lacewing Emotivism Michael Lacewing
The Verification Principle & Religious Language The Logical Positivists, led by the philosophers of the Vienna Circle and then further developed by A.J.Ayer.
Philosophy of Science Psychology is the science of behavior. Science is the study of alternative explanations. We need to understand the concept of an.
“God talk is evidently non-sense” A.J. Ayer. Ayer is a logical positivist – a member of the Vienna Circle. Any claim made about God (including Atheistic)
Ludwig Wittgenstein EARLY: PICTURE THEORY LATER: LANGUAGE GAMES.
Religious Language  Language is about communication  Religious language is a means of communicating about religion  This can be within three contexts:
Lecture 7: Ways of Knowing - Reason. Part 1: What is reasoning? And, how does it lead to knowledge?
LO: I will know how thinkers have solved the problem of speaking meaningfully about God by making negative statements of what God is not.
Rachel Petrik Based on writing by A.J. Ayer
Epistemology revision Concept empiricist arguments against concept innatism:  Alternative explanations (no such concept or concept re- defined as based.
Science News. Science (?) News Demarcation “We [scientists] believe that the world is knowable, that there are simple rules governing the behavior of.
Is it possible to verify statements about God? The Logical Positivists would say no – God is a metaphysical being and it is impossible to empirically verify.
Can religious language be meaningful? Today’s lesson will be successful if you can: Explain the Verification Principle Critique the Verification Principle.
Ayer & the Weak Verification Principle LO’s: 1: To understand the ideas of A.J. Ayer 2: To consider how he developed the verification principle LO’s: 1:
It is now generally admitted, at any rate by philosophers, that the existence of a being having the attributes which define the god of any non-animistic.
The Copleston, Russell Debate Copleston’s Cosmological argument (1948 BBC radio debate)
Meta Ethics The Language of Ethics.
OA: Faith and Reason What difference does the argument make
Knowledge Empiricism 2.
Hume’s Fork A priori/ A posteriori Empiricism/ Rationalism
Extent to which Challenges to Religious Experience are Valid, including CF Davis
O.A. so far.. Anselm – from faith, the fool, 2 part argument
Religious responses to the verification principle
Verificationism on religious language
Philosophy of Mathematics 1: Geometry
Ludwig Wittgenstein EARLY: PICTURE THEORY LATER: LANGUAGE GAMES.
The philosophical problems of the verification principle
Religious Language.
RM Hare - The Parable of the Paranoid Lunatic
RELIGIOUS LANGUAGE.
Reading material Articles: Tillich on symbols & Aquinas on analogy questions 1. What is art? 2. Does it open up new levels of reality for you? 3. Does.
The Copleston, Russell Debate
Using Analogy to Understand God
Welcome back to Religious Studies
The Ontological Argument
Did King Harold die at the battle of Hastings?
THE ONTOLOGICAL ARGUMENT.
Is this statement meaningful?
4 B Criticisms of the verification and falsification principles
The Verification Principle
THE COSMOLOGICAL ARGUMENT.
RELIGIOUS LANGUAGE.
Flying pig spotted in Amazon Jungle…
Discussion: Can one meaningfully talk of a transcendent metaphysical God acting (creating sustaining, being loving) in a physical empirical world? Ayer.
The Ontological Argument
Or Can you?.
‘A triangle has three sides’
On your whiteboard: What is Naturalism?
Religious Language as cognitive, but meaningless
By the end of today’s lesson you will
‘Torture is Good’ How does that phrase make you feel?
Is murder wrong? A: What is murder? B: What is the law on murder in the UK? A: Do you think murder is wrong? B: Do you think murder is wrong? ‘Garment.
By the end of today’s lesson you will
Ethical and religious language
Verification and meaning
By the end of this lesson you will have:
Miracles – A Comparative Study of Two Key Scholars
A guide for the perplexed (who think it is all meaningless)
Presentation transcript:

Religious Language as cognitive, but meaningless Verification (A.J. Ayer) – religious language as meaningless; there can be no way in which we could verify the truth or falsehood of the proposition (e.g. God is good, murder is wrong)

What are the problems with religious language? “I am the good shepherd” “I am the bread of life” “I am the light of the world” “I am the resurrection and the life” These are all statements recorded in the Gospel of John that Jesus made about himself. I am the resurrection Questions 1. Would any of these help you to understand Christian ideas about God? 2. What are the problems?

Knowledge test What A Level exam is religious language on? What is meant by the term cognitive? What is the problem with claiming religious language is cognitive? Define ‘objective’ Define ‘subjective’ What is meant by anthropomorphic? Name one other problem with defining God? Why is it difficult to understand the phrase ‘God is love’?

Background and influences – complete the A4 summary sheet Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951), one of the most remarkable philosophers of the twentieth century, raised the whole question of the meaning of language, and inspired debates across the world: people were asking what the necessary conditions for something to have any meaning at all might be, and how it is conveyed from one person to another in short they were discussing ‘the meaning of meaning’ David Hume and empiricism We get all our knowledge from our sense experience. Why is this a problem for religious language? Science Evidence based Testable

The Logical Positivists Wittgenstein was a strong influence on the Vienna Circle, a group of philosophers led by the writer Moritz Schlick who met throughout the 1920’s and 30’s. They held the belief that theological interpretations of events and experiences belonged in the past, to an unenlightened age when ‘God’ was used as an explanation for anything that science had not yet completely mastered. Leaving God as ‘the god of the gaps’. They believed that any discussion about anything that could not logically (and by use of the senses) be proven (verified)to be true (positive) was meaningless. Thus, Logical Positivism.

Discuss the following statements: Jenny’s car is blue. 2. There is a small hobbit sat under my desk that becomes invisible when anyone looks at it, can move quicker than any human who tries to touch it and never makes a sound. 3. 2 + 2 = 4 4. All humans are mortal. 5. A bachelor is an unmarried man 6. There is life on other planets. 7. It is currently snowing at the South Pole. How can these statement can be verified?

What does the Verification Principle think is meaningful language? Analytic Statement True by definition (tautology) and cannot be false a priori statements which are true because the wording of the statement verifies its truth e.g. ‘The widow was once married’, ‘the circle is round’. Mathematical Statements 5 + 5 does add up to 10, if it adds up to 9 then a simple recalculation would solve the issue. Synthetic Statements a posteriori statements which can be verifiable or falsified through empirical evidence e.g. ‘It is currently snowing at the South Pole’. These statements are considered meaningful as they can, in theory, hold verifiable or falsifiable truths. Which of these statements would be meaningful: Dogs bark Swans are green There is life on other planets Ice cream is cold I love my children

Implications for religious language The Vienna Circle concluded that religious statements were meaningless, on the basis that they do not satisfy any of these criteria, because religious language claims are subjective and cannot therefore be empirically tested and verified In Language, Truth and Logic (Penguin, 1936), A J Ayer observed that, since the existence of God cannot be rationally demonstrated, it is not even probable, since the term ‘god’ is a metaphysical term referring to a transcendent being which cannot therefore have any literal significance. Question: What is meant by ‘probable’? As such, Ayer observed that the same had therefore to be the case for atheistic and agnostic statements, since any statement which includes the term ‘god’ is meaningless. Ayer argued that, since claims about God’s existence cannot be contradicted, they are not ‘significant propositions’ – they are neither true nor false, but cannot be valid. ‘The notion of a being whose essential attributes are non-empirical is not an intelligible notion at all’.

Implications for religious language Ayer was not simply concerned with talking about God, but also with all other religious language, including: Talk of an after life, which cannot be verified either. Talk of a soul he dismissed as meaningless since it is a metaphysical assertion to say that ‘there is something imperceptible inside a man, which is his soul or his real self, and that it goes on living after he is dead’. Talk of religious experience was also soundly dismissed by Ayer as being talk of experience which cannot be validated empirically: ‘The fact that people have religious experiences is interesting from the psychological point of view, but it does not in any way imply that there is such as thing as religious knowledge’.

Discuss the following statements Discuss the following statements. What issues arise for the logical positivists? “All ravens are black” “The view from my hotel window is beautiful” “The Battle of Hastings took place in 1066”

Verificationism does not allow for statements that are not either empirically verifiable or tautologies. Such statements are considered as meaningless, by which they mean the statement literally has no meaning in a factual sense. As a result, statements regarding beauty or expressing a preference are meaningless. The beauty of a piece of art, a view, or a person cannot be decided on the basis of observation, nor can it be answered ‘true’ or ‘false’

Problems with the verification principle Richard Swinburne in ‘God-talk is Not Evidently Nonsense’ challenges verificationism giving the example ‘All ravens are (at all times) black’. Swinburne points out that whilst people generally accept ravens are black, there is no way to ever confirm this statement, as however many ravens you look at there is always the possibility of there being one more raven that is not black. Therefore, according to verificationism, the statement is meaningless. Universal statements A further problem lies with historical events and statements made about them. Saying the battle of Hastings happened in 1066 is not verifiable by us using our sense experiences and observations.

Ayer’s response to the problems A.J. Ayer firstly clarified what was meant by meaningless, this being a statement that is not ‘factually significant’ (Language, Truth & Logic). Ayer was not denying that people make statements that are important to them, such as ‘God answers my prayers’ they are just unverifiable so have no factual significance. So, how do you verify a proposition? Practical Verifiability and Verifiability in Principle Practical verifiability refers to statements that can be tested in reality. If I said ‘England Rugby team wear purple shirts’ this is verifiable in practice. However, if I said ‘there is life on other planets in the our galaxy’ this is meaningful and verifiable in principle, but in practice we lack the technical ability to visit every planet and look for life.

Strong and Weak Verification Ayer distinguished between ‘strong’ and ‘weak’ verification. Strong verification applied anything that can be verified conclusively using empirical evidence e.g. What are the problems with this? Ravens, history, generalisations Weak verification refers to statements that are verifiable in principle, this means that I would know what I would have to do in order to verify it. What sort of statements would this allow? Ayer suggested weak verification should be form used as strong verification has no real application e.g. ‘All humans are mortal’.

The verification principle: Complete tasks 9 to 15 Homework – learn todays work for a test tomorrow A.J.Ayer http://A.J.Ayer on Logical Positivism

Test Where did the logical positivists meet? Explain the meaning of cognitive . . . and non-cognitive Define an analytic statement Define a synthetic statement What religious language did the logical positivists consider to be meaningless? Give 2 specific examples. Why does the verification principle pose a problem for scientific and historical statements? Explain the strong verification principle Explain the weak verification principle