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The Ontological Argument. Anselm vs. Descartes
The Ontological Argument. Anselm vs. Descartes

... they employ, their cultural context, and the aim pursued by their arguments place them within different epochs, different lines of thought, at times even partially contradictory ones (given the complexity and ambivalence of Descartes’ attitude towards the scholasticism of his times). Whereas the sch ...
Glossary - Oxford University Press
Glossary - Oxford University Press

... argument. analogy An analogy is a similarity between things. In an argument from analogy, one argues from known similarities to further similarities. Such arguments often occur in philosophy. In his Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, David Hume considers an argument from analogy that purports to ...
James Warren, Facing Death, Epicurus and his Critics (Book Review)
James Warren, Facing Death, Epicurus and his Critics (Book Review)

... seems to be a "harm". But, although the case of children being raised with different levels of access to resources may have a place within the question of global justice, the case of such "unperceived" comparative posthumous harms fails as a counter argument to the Epicurean position. In the origina ...
glossary of philosophical terms
glossary of philosophical terms

... argument. analogy An analogy is a similarity between things. In an argument from analogy, one argues from known similarities to further similarities. Such arguments often occur in philosophy. In his Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, David Hume considers an argument from analogy that purports to ...
Why Hume and Kant were mistaken in rejecting natural theology
Why Hume and Kant were mistaken in rejecting natural theology

... forward is to try to show either that p does entail a contradiction or that some other proposition q is logically possible and that q entails p. For if q is logically possible, so is any proposition which is entailed by q. One proposition x entails another one y iff (x and not –y) is logically impo ...
Logos, Ethos and Pathos
Logos, Ethos and Pathos

... • Those who wish to persuade you will play with your emotions. They may persuade you with fear, love, patriotism, guilt, hate or joy. • Although the use of pathos can be manipulative, it is the cornerstone of moving people to action and it will continue to be used again and again. ...
deductive reasoning
deductive reasoning

... the course of an argument, sometimes referred to as a “weasel word.” 3. Begging the Question occurs when the conclusion of an argument is already present, usually disguised, in one of its premises. 4. Ad Hominem (appeal to the person) irrelevantly attacks the person making a claim rather than attack ...
Philosophy 148
Philosophy 148

... All Bananas are yellow .: I’m peeling something yellow. ...
Socrates and Plato - Metaphysics and Epistemology
Socrates and Plato - Metaphysics and Epistemology

... You just agreed that no one would want to live around people he knows would harm him. As for religion, do you accuse me of teaching different gods or of being an atheist? .......Miletus: You are an atheist. .......Socrates: But you say I teach spiritual concepts and believe in strange divine beings. ...
Spencer Rosenvall Aquinas` Argument Analysis Aquinas was one of
Spencer Rosenvall Aquinas` Argument Analysis Aquinas was one of

... is really one argument, “There always was motion and always cause” (Rowe). Rowe’s argument to Aquinas’ second Cosmological argument is: “Just because each member of a collection has a cause doesn’t entail that the collection itself has a cause” (Class Notes). He uses the obvious example, “Just becau ...
Deductive Arguments
Deductive Arguments

... Deductive arguments attempt to show that something follows conclusively from a set of premises. A successful deductive argument is described as deductively valid. Look at the following argument: Premise 1 – The Queen’s dog is infested with fleas. Premise 2 – All fleas are bacteria. Conclusion – The ...
Socratic Method.
Socratic Method.

... In general, most Christians are dualists. They hold that reality is divided into two parts. Our souls are eternal and non-material; our bodies, like the physical universe, are temporal and material. Plato's view of reality is often termed dualistic, that is, he saw reality "dual", divided into two p ...
Analogy and pattern recognition
Analogy and pattern recognition

... also be compared with the clock. Now, an analogy can be established from an example that is similar in a relevant aspect - in the case of the watchmaker analogy, the example would be the clock and the relevant aspect would be the complexity of the clock comparable to the complexity of the world - an ...
Philosophy 120 Symbolic Logic I H. Hamner Hill
Philosophy 120 Symbolic Logic I H. Hamner Hill

... difference between justification and discovery. ...
Moral and Social Philosophy
Moral and Social Philosophy

... we gradually adapted to the environment. • However some argue that in order for any life to exist the earth and the whole universe must be very special. • Some say the design argument still does have force because the whole universe is ordered. We have reliable laws of nature : – These laws of natur ...
Stove`s Discovery of the Worst Argument in the World
Stove`s Discovery of the Worst Argument in the World

... players in the intellectual world? The cultural-relativist, for example, inveighs bitterly against our science-based, white-male cultural perspective. She says that it is not only injurious but cognitively limiting. Injurious it may be; or again it may not. But why does she believe that it is cognit ...
What is Logical Form?
What is Logical Form?

... Dualism is the view that all of reality is divided into two kinds of things. Thus, if you believe that all of reality is divided between the realm of God and the physical universe, or that there is a "higher world" and a "lower world", or that reality is composed of spirit and matter, you are a dual ...
ao2-ontological
ao2-ontological

... inferior to the same island existing in reality. If our island is truly the mostperfect, it cannot be inferior to any other island: it must exist in reality. But clearly, there is no such island in reality. We cannot bring something into existence just by defining it. “When someone tells me there is ...
HW #3 Solutions
HW #3 Solutions

... This is a really interesting question! In the United States legal system, there is an important distinction between the standards of evidence for criminal trials vs civil trials. In a criminal trial, the jury should only convict a defendant if, based on the total evidence that is presented during th ...
Class #8 - 4/29/13
Class #8 - 4/29/13

... knowledge of the relevant similarities. In this one, we do not know how nature and living things are made and thus that it is at all “like” a watch being made. ...
Philosophy Papers - Warren Wilson College
Philosophy Papers - Warren Wilson College

... Argument/Thesis Statement The whole point of a philosophy paper is to advance a specific thesis. It is the boss of your paper, to which everything else must answer. Remember, a thesis is a single claim on a distinct topic that you can support with evidence. Although there are very many different kin ...
arguments - UCSD Philosophy
arguments - UCSD Philosophy

... in lecture). Anselm writes: “And indeed, we believe that thou art a being than which nothing greater can be conceived. Or is there no such nature, since the fool has said in his heart , there is no God? But at any rate, this very fool, when he hears of this being of which I speak -- a being than whi ...
Word
Word

... The non-Christian, then, in Van Til’s famous illustration, is like a child sitting on her father’s lap, slapping his face. She could not slap him unless he supported her. Similarly, the non-Christian cannot carry out his rebellion against God unless God makes that rebellion possible. Contradicting G ...
Is There a God?
Is There a God?

... Ottoline: E:CPBRPUBV11\V11MAST.EXP : 2008-01-15 15:50 ...
Class #8
Class #8

... knowledge of the relevant similarities. In this one, we do not know how nature and living things are made and thus that it is at all “like” a watch being made. ...
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Teleological argument

The teleological or physico-theological argument, also known as the argument from design, or intelligent design argument is an argument for the existence of God or, more generally, for an intelligent creator ""based on perceived evidence of deliberate design in the natural or physical world"". It is historically closely associated with the concept of Natural Theology.The earliest recorded versions of this argument are associated with Socrates in ancient Greece, although it has been argued that he was taking up an older argument. Plato, his student, and Aristotle, Plato's student, developed complex approaches to the proposal that the cosmos has an intelligent cause, but it was the Stoics who, under their influence, ""developed the battery of creationist arguments broadly known under the label ""The Argument from Design"""".Socratic philosophy influenced the development of the Abrahamic religions in many ways, and the teleological argument has a long association with them. In the Middle Ages, Islamic theologians such as Al Ghazali used the argument, although it was rejected as unnecessary by Quranic literalists, and as unconvincing by many Islamic philosophers. Later, the teleological argument was accepted by Saint Thomas Aquinas' and included as the fifth of his ""Five Ways"" of proving the existence of God. In early modern England clergymen such as William Turner and John Ray were well-known proponents. In the early 18th century, William Derham published his Physico-Theology, which gave his ""demonstration of the being and attributes of God from his works of creation"". Later, William Paley, in his 1802 work on natural theology, published a prominent presentation of the design argument with his version of the watchmaker analogy and the first use of the phrase ""argument from design"".From the beginning, there have been numerous criticisms of the different versions of the teleological argument, and responses to its challenge to the claims against non-teleological natural science. Especially important were the general logical arguments made by David Hume in his Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, published 1779, and the explanation of biological complexity given in Charles Darwin's Origin of Species, published in 1859. Since the 1960s, Paley's arguments, including the words ""intelligent design"", have been influential in the development of a creation science movement, especially the form known as the intelligent design movement, which not only uses the teleological argument to argue against the modern Darwinian understanding of evolution, but also makes the philosophical claim that it can provide a basis for scientific proof of the divine origin of biological species.Also starting already in classical Greece, two approaches to the teleological argument developed, distinguished by their understanding of whether the natural order was literally created or not. The non-creationist approach starts most clearly with Aristotle, although many thinkers, such as the Neoplatonists, believed it was already intended by Plato. This approach is not creationist in a simple sense, because while it agrees that a cosmic intelligence is responsible for the natural order, it rejects the proposal that this requires a ""creator"" to physically make and maintain this order. The Neoplatonists did not find the teleological argument convincing, and in this they were followed by medieval philosophers such as Al-Farabi and Avicenna. Later, Averroes and Thomas Aquinas considered the argument acceptable, but not necessarily the best argument. In contrast to the approach of such philosophers and theologians, the intelligent design movement makes a creationist claim for an intelligence that intervenes in the natural order.
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