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The Design Argument. 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 your paragraphs – don’t produce a list. a) Explain the main features of the Design Argument [30]
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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 your paragraphs – don’t produce a list.
a) Explain the main features of the Design Argument [30] • Intro – inductive, a priori • Aquinas – 5th way, Summa Theologica, God not self-evident, design qua regularity, heart, 2 things in nature, chance or God, Archer analogy. • Paley – Natural Theology, similar effect, similar causes, watch analogy, design qua regularity (planets), design qua purpose (eye), scale and proportion. • Swinburne – Argument from Spatial Order, Argument from Temporal Order, Anthropic Principle • Tennant – Aesthetic Principle
Explain how science challenges the Design Argument. [30] • Darwin – On the Origin of the Species (1859) Explain the key ideas, but don’t waffle! (NS, adaptation) • Dawkins – The Blind Watchmaker • “All attempts to understand humanity before 1859 are useless.” Continuing to support the Design Argument is ‘intellectual suicide.’ • “Paley ... [is] wrong, gloriously and utterly wrong” The appearance of design is an illusion. • “[Evolution is] a blind, unconscious, automatic process.” – Questioning the apparent purpose of the universe • “Design is not the only alternative to chance, Natural Selection is a better alternative.”
Explain how the Design Argument has been criticised by Philosophy [30] • David Hume – Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion • Criticisms based on the use of analogy • Moving too far from the evidence • Can’t check to see if there is a worldmaker • If God made us, who made God? • Anthropomorphism • Hume and John Stuart Mill – Evil and Suffering leads to belief in an imperfect God. • THIS IS NOT A B) QUESTION – THERE IS NO NEED TO ARGUE AGAINST HUME IN A)!!
B Questions A good B question will: • Have a clear argument running through it, but will not use ‘I’. • Examine both sides. • Contain analysis (next slide will help) • Be focussed on the question. • Come to a conclusion which is based on evidence discussed in the essay.
Critical Analysis • This is a very damaging criticism because ___. • However, one could argue that _____. • The Design Argument can not stand up against this criticism because _____ • Although Polkinghorne defends the Design Argument by stating _____, he fails to protect the argument fully because _______. • Dawkin’s argument’s is weak here because ____. • Despite this criticism, the Design Argument is still a sound one because ________.
b) “The Design Argument makes it reasonable to believe in God.” How far do you agree with this statement? [15] • FOR • Kant – appeals to our common sense. A posteriori so we can all relate to it. • Swinburne – adapts the argument, makes it fit with modern ideas (evolution) • Tennant – Aesthetic principle – beauty not explained by evolution • Cumulative Argument • AGAINST • Kant and Hume– moves too far away from the evidence. Hume’s criticisms. • God of the gaps? + is there order in the universe? What kind of God are we left with? • If God is responsible for beauty, is He not also responsible for suffering and evil (Hume / J S Mill. • Leaky Bucket Argument
b) Assess the view that science makes the Design Argument a failure. [15] • AGAINST • Swinburne – Argument from Temporal Order • Anthropic Principle – Tennant, de Chardin • God gives purpose through evolotion (Kingsley) • Swinburne – Parable of the Kidnapped Man • FOR • Dawkins - Natural Selection – ‘a better alternative’. • Paley has been shown to be ‘wrong, gloriously and utterly wrong.’ • Order of the universe is an illusion • There is no purpose in the universe. • God is not needed to explain the universe.
To what extent do the criticisms of David Hume threaten to destroy the Design Argument? [15] • FOR • Moves too far away from the evidence • God of Christianity? Anthropomorphism • Suffering and Evil • If God made us who made God? • AGAINST • The Argument is inductive, we need to use faith to reach the conclusion that God exists • Humans are made in ‘God’s image so there are links. Scale and Proportion • God has a reason for suffering. Humans cause evil due to free will • God is outside of space and time, therefore, needs no cause.
Assess how successful Richard Swinburne has been in defending the Design Argument from the criticisms of Science and Philosophy. [15] • AGAINST • God of the Gaps • There are still Philosophical problems like evil. • Unusual events do happen. Evolution can be down to chance • Examples of complete disorder in the universe – Black Holes. • FOR • Recognises the argument needs to adapt to incorporate science • Argument from Temporal Order does not use analogy • Parable of the Kidnapped Man – the fact that Evolution happened needs explanation • Anthropic Principle – God ‘fine-tuned’ universe to enable evolution to happen