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Chapter 12: Is There a God?. Introduction. Can the existence of God be proven? Philosophy of religion – philosophical study of a wide variety of religious issues Theology – “study of God”
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Introduction • Can the existence of God be proven? • Philosophy of religion – philosophical study of a wide variety of religious issues • Theology – “study of God” • Revealed theology – claims human knowledge of God comes through special revelations such as the Bible or Qur’an • Natural theology – knowledge of God is possible based on “natural” reason, unaided by special revelation • Theism – religious notion of ultimate reality based on God
Arguments for God’s Existence • Cosmological arguments – argues from the existence of the universe to the existence of God as its cause, creator, or explanation • Aristotle argued from the existence of motion to the Unmoved Mover as the explanation of motion • Aristotle’s principles: • Something cannot be the cause of itself • Something cannot come from nothing • There cannot be an infinite series of cause and effects • Kalam – “speech” in Arabic; denotes the statement of points in theological doctrine; Islamic thought about God’s existence in relation to the created universe
The Five WaysSt. Thomas Aquinas • 5 Arguments for the existence of God: • Argument from motion • There must be a First Efficient Cause • Argument of possibility and necessity- What caused something to exist from nothing, other than something that did not have to be created? • There must be something which is to all beings the cause of their being, goodness, and every other perfection • Some intelligent being exists which gives natural things a purpose or design
The Kalam Argument from IslamWilliam Craig • Modern version of the kalam argument • Concludes that the existence of the universe has a cause • Syllogism for the need for a first cause: • Everything that begins to exist has a cause of its existence • The universe began to exist • Therefore the universe has a cause for its existence
Problems with the Cosmological ArgumentGunapala Dharmasiri • The Buddha did not think that one needed the idea of a creator God to explain the existence of the world • The causes of what exists can be found within the world itself
Creationism vs. Evolution • Teleological argument – argument from design; the universe exhibits order which is due to a supreme, divine intelligence • William Paley (1743 – 1805) saw the universe as a vast, harmonious, interconnected order designed for a purpose • David Hume criticizes the teleological argument • Universe is not sufficiently like the productions of human design to support the argument • We would have to be able to compare our universe to another in order to decide if it was designed or simply grew on its own • An effect must be proportionate to its cause: Because the universe is imperfect, its cause must be imperfect • Charles Darwin published On the Origin of the Species in 1859 • The order nature exhibits is the result of evolutionary processes
The Blind WatchmakerRichard Dawkins • Argues for neo-Darwinian views of evolution • Argues that evolution uses the process of cumulative selection, as opposed to single-step selection, which explains how we now have an ordered, intelligent universe • Single-step selection – filters all items once and for all • Cumulative selection – filters repeatedly, passing on some of the results of the first selection onto the next and so forth
Why Do Babies Suffer? • Problem of evil – why does evil exist; how can one harmonize the existence of evil with the existence of a perfectly good, all-powerful, and all-knowing God? • According to Aquinas, because God is infinitely good and all-powerful, he can bring good out of evil
God and the Problem of EvilB. C. Johnson • Takes the concrete situation of a six-month-old baby painfully burning to death to demonstrate that traditional attempts to explain why God allows evil seem inadequate • Are we making excuses for God and allowing him to get away with behavior we would not tolerate from other humans?
Beyond God the FatherMary Daly • Believes that human symbols and concepts of God have reinforced sexism