© Michael Lacewing The Argument from Design Michael Lacewing

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Recent versions of the Design Argument So far we have considered the classical arguments of Aquinas and Paley. However, the design argument has attracted.
Advertisements

Anthropic Design Arguments and the Anthropic Principle
Explaining the universe Michael Lacewing co.uk.
The argument from design: God
Explaining the universe
a) AO1 – Knowledge and Understanding Explain in detail Use technical terms (and explain them) Include quotations Link back to the question Make sure your.
Concept innatism II: the case of substance Michael Lacewing
Swinburne’s argument from design
The Argument from Design. The Argument Famously presented by William Paley, who imagined stumbling across a watch in a wilderness Famously presented by.
The argument from design: Paley v. Hume Michael Lacewing
Michael Lacewing Idealism: objections Michael Lacewing
The Cosmological Argument St. Thomas Aquinas ( AD) Italian priest, philosopher.
Cosmological arguments from causation Michael Lacewing
Cosmological arguments from contingency Michael Lacewing
Design Arguments. Arguments for theism Ontological arguments Cosmological arguments Design arguments.
The Existence of God Daniel von Wachter. Issues involved How does “God” refer? What is God supposed to be like? What makes theistic belief rational? (basic.
The Teleological Argument
Philosophy of Religion Michael Lacewing
A Questions AO1 – Knowledge and Understanding – one side. Explain in lots of detail 20 mins Approx 2 sides Link back to the question Make links between.
The Teleological Argument October 7 th The Teleological Argument Learning Objective: To analyse the argument from Design, considering its strengths.
The Teleological Argument also known as “ the argument from design ”
The Cosmological Argument (Causation or ‘first cause’ theory)
EXISTENCE OF GOD You need to be able to…
Recent versions of the Design Argument. Describe the teleological argument for the existence of God. 4KU An argument for the existence of God or a creator.
The Design Argument Introduction. This proof always deserves to be mentioned with respect. It is the oldest, clearest, and the most accordant with the.
It is reasonable to infer the existence of God from the fact that the world is as it is; just like the cosmological argument. We are going to consider.
Teleological Argument Also Known As The Argument From Design.
Epistemology Revision Another criticism of indirect realism:  Problems arising from the view that mind-dependent objects represent mind-independent objects.
Evidently the Cosmological argument as proposed by Aquinas is open to both interpretation and criticism. The Cosmological argument demands an explanation.
1.The argument makes it likely that there are lots of worldmakers. Strength: Man made things often require many creators. For example a house needs many.
“A WISE MAN PROPORTIONS HIS BELIEF TO EVIDENCE”
© Michael Lacewing Substance and Property Dualism Michael Lacewing
Believing in God (need Christian knowledge only in this unit) Revise key aspects of the unit Create set of revision notes.
Teleological Argument. Teleological argument or the argument from design is based upon observation of the world Teleological argument or the argument.
1.Everything which begins to exist has a cause. 2.The Universe exists so it must have a cause. 3.You cannot have infinite regress (i.e. An infinite number.
Teleological arguments for God’s existence
Arguments for design Michael Lacewing
Chapter 1: Religion God as Creator: Intelligence and Design Introducing Philosophy, 10th edition Robert C. Solomon, Kathleen Higgins, and Clancy Martin.
Inductive Arguments that God Exists Based loosely on the work of Richard Swinburne.
HUME ON THE ARGUMENT FROM DESIGN (Part 1 of 2) Text source: Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, parts 2-5.
Arguments against the existence of God Do you believe in God? Why or why not?
L/O: To explore Hume’s criticisms of the Design Argument.
Give definitions Give an opinion and justify that opinion Explain religious attitudes Respond to a statement – 2 sides.
Two central questions What does it mean to talk of, or believe in, God? –Is talk about God talk about something that exists independently of us? Or a way.
Revision Notes Courtesy of Mr Dixon. Instructions This PowerPoint has all the information you need to complete your Revision Booklets for the Science.
By Jagrav and Rahul.  Theist - A person who believes in God  Atheist - A person who believes there is no God  Agnostic - A person who believes we cannot.
Philosophy of Religion
Starter: Mix-Pair-Share
Cosmological arguments from contingency
The Argument from Design
Michael Lacewing Arguments for design Michael Lacewing
Substance and Property Dualism
Responses to the Design argument
The Argument from Design
Evaluation Questions Whether inductive arguments for God’s existence are persuasive. The extent to which the Kalam cosmological argument is convincing.
Explaining the universe
AO2 Questions Evaluating the Teleological Argument
Paley’s design argument
Descartes’ conceivability argument for substance dualism
Cosmological Argument: Philosophical Criticisms
THE COSMOLOGICAL ARGUMENT.
THE COSMOLOGICAL ARGUMENT.
The Argument from Design
The Teleological Argument
THE NATURE OF SCIENCE.
Or Can you?.
THE COSMOLOGICAL ARGUMENT.
The Nature of Science.
Responding to Religious Apologetics
The Teleological Argument
Presentation transcript:

© Michael Lacewing The Argument from Design Michael Lacewing

The argument from analogy Hume: The curious adapting of means to ends, through all nature, resembles exactly, though it much exceeds, the productions of human contrivance; of human design, thought, wisdom, and intelligence…

The argument from analogy …Since, therefore, the effects resemble each other, we are led to infer, by all the rules of analogy, that the causes also resemble; and that the Author of Nature is somewhat similar to the mind of man, though possessed of much larger faculties, proportioned to the grandeur of the work which he has executed.

Hume’s objections The analogy between man-made, designed objects and the universe is weak. We can’t generalise from our small experience. There are other possible explanations. The designer might not be God (poor design, not infinite).

Paley’s variant Paley doesn’t use analogy. He concentrates on correct inference from apparent design to designer - in the case of the watch. The same properties that allow us to infer a designer of a watch are possessed by nature. Not so: natural things are not obviously manufactured.

Richard Swinburne Presumably…the matter-energy at the time of the Big Bang when the universe began…had just the quantity, density, and initial velocity as to lead in the course of time to the evolution of organisms…. Only a certain sort of critical arrangement of matter and certain kinds of laws of nature will give rise to organisms. And recent scientific work on the fine-tuning of the universe has shown that the initial matter and the laws of nature had to have very, very special features indeed if organisms were to evolve. (Think, Vol. 1)

Science is inadequate Science can’t explain the origins of the universe. Science can’t explain scientific laws, because all scientific explanations presuppose laws. And we need to explain the very specific laws that allow for the existence of life. Either there is some other explanation of them, or the whole way the universe is, is complete coincidence.

Personal explanation We can explain the universe if we give a personal explanation in terms of God: God wanted life to exist, so created the physical laws to make this possible. We use explanations in terms of persons - what we want, believe, intend - all the time. These are not explanations that make use of scientific laws.

Is ‘God’ an explanation? ‘What explains God?’ is no better than ‘What explains scientific laws?’ Swinburne: that we can’t explain God is no objection. A good explanation may posit something unexplained. This happens in science all the time, e.g. subatomic particles.

God? Swinburne: If the teleological or cosmological arguments show that some being exists, it is simplest to suppose that being has unlimited power, knowledge, etc. Copleston: God’s existence doesn’t need explanation, as God exists necessarily.

Does the universe need explaining? It’s incredibly unlikely, before the draw, that whoever wins will win. But someone will win. With enough chances, the incredibly unlikely can become inevitable. If there are lots of universes, one of them would have the right conditions for life. But are there lots of universes? What’s the evidence?

Why us? Why this one? No reason: but if it wasn’t this one, we wouldn’t be here to ask the question! It’s all a big coincidence.