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The 3 texts are by Ayer, Donovan & Westphal. Ayer’s is the shortest – a mere 8 paragraphs. Donovan is the longest with 68 paragraphs (albeit they are a lot shorter that Ayer’s). Overall Donovan is 3.5 times longer than Ayer. Westphal is between the other 2. Westphal has 30 paragraphs of a similar length to Donovan and it is about half the overall length of Donavan and twice the length of Ayer. Last summer the text was Ayer and in 2012 it was Donovan. In 2011, it was Westphal and in 2010, it was Donovan again. In 2009, the text was Westphal and in 2008 (the 1st year of the Implications exam) it was Ayer. Ayer’s 8 paragraphs are fairly repetitive. They all push the same theme that non-empirical language is meaningless. Because Ayer writes the piece himself and it is primarily about Ayer’s own theory (the modified verification Principle) it tends to be rather one-sided but this makes it a fairly straightforward matter to write about and analyse, provided you are conversant with the Religious Language module. Donovan also follows a fairly steady theme: That is “Can God be known by Experience?” But the text is divided up into different categories. This is because Donovan is not writing about himself. He is overseeing the argument and he tends to come down between the extremes of those who say we can know God and those who say we cannot by experience. Donovan believes you need a little more than a basic intuitive experience. Westphal’s text is different to the others as it is a progression rather than a fixed theme. It seems little more than a History of Philosophy over the last few centuries and the turning point of the Enlightenment. It is a bit more difficult to analyse than the others as it is not really about opinions. One of the main differences of A2 Religious Studies over AS is the links you are supposed to draw between the modules. The exam that Implications replaced in 2008 used to be called the synoptic paper. Up to 2007 BWS and SWGS ran a combined course where we had to link New Testament Studies and Philosophy on the theme of Miracles. Since the introduction of the Implications paper in 2008 the links are not so explicit and you sometimes struggle to get them in. You do not have to link to every AS and A2 Philosophy and Ethics topic, but you have to do enough to show that you understand the topic and where it fits into the philosophical themes of the 3 different Implications texts. The most obvious links to Ayer’s text is Religious Language and then a pretty close second comes Religious Experience (as language is the expression of an experience). Atheism is pretty high on the list as Ayer’s 2nd paragraph is concerned with this. Even though Ayer is anti atheism, he is not a believer and would prefer the title non-theist. Life after Death can be accounted for when you use Hick’s eschatological argument. If you are using the A Priori / A Posteriori split, you can bring in the Design and Cosmological arguments as an example of A Posteriori and the Ontological argument as an example of A Priori. This just leaves Miracles (part of Experience – use it as an exemplar) and Evil and Suffering (the main reason the fellow empiricist, Hume, gave to deny the theistic God) in order to complete the Philosophy links. By far the most important Ethical link is Ayer’s Emotivism (Yah/Boo) theory, but you can also link to G E Moore and other ethical theories. The most obvious links to Donovan’s text are similar to Ayer’s links – obviously Religious Experience and religious Language go without saying but you must explicitly state the links (e.g. This links to William James 4 categories of Mystical Experience. ………..) Atheism links quite well with empiricists like Russell casting doubts on the truth of Religious Experiences. Life after Death can be linked by the whole concept of knowing God and knowing one’s destination at death. The sheer subjectivity of Experience links to the Ontological argument which Russell again attacked. Donovan links to the AS modules in a similar way that Ayer does. The Design and Cosmological argument shows the a posteriori (evidence based arguments) which are fairly weak as they are inductive – one has to interpret ones experience in light of one’s beliefs. Miracles are linked here with the whole idea of wishful thinking – people want to experience a miracle. Evil and Suffering ties in well with experience as we all suffer during our lives but we provide theodicies to justify the theistic God. It is a bit more difficult to link Westphal to the other modules than the other two texts but it can be done. The most obvious links are with the Atheism modules which include a variety of non theistic belief (Kant was a deist & Hume was probably an atheist or agnostic at best). It links to the Cosmological, Design and Ontological arguments as these are the ones that Kant and Hume systematically destroyed. It links to Experience in the form of Schleirmacher’s intense subjectivity (he calls it feeling rather than intuition but it is pretty close to Owen’s Intuition) (again you can use Miracles as an exemplar) It links to Life after Death in the form of Kant’s Moral argument (which also gives an Ethical link). Links to religious Language permeate throughout Wesphal’s text but they are usually implicit rather than explicit, but the best example is in M7 when discussing Hegel‘s antipathy to the change to Philosophy of Religion from Philosophical Theology. Evil and suffering are explicitly linked in M14 where Augustine and Pelagius (a 5th century Irenaeus type figure who unfortunately lived post Constantine). We have accounted for the links to the philosophical modules and at least one Ethical link But examiners also like to see you put these texts in a broader context. They would like you to show that you do not do philosophy in isolation and you can link it to the outside world. Obviously some subjects are easier to link to than other. History is probably the easiest link. All three texts have historical qualities – Ayer and the Logical Positivists were writing mainly between the two world wars. A similar time frame is being written about by Donovan. Westphal sets most of his action in the Enlightenment period, especially the late 18th century when Europe was on the brink of change between an Agrarian society & an Industrial one. Many other subjects can be linked such as science (particularly the Enlightenment context of Westphal). Politics comes in to all the texts in some form. English obviously comes in to the Ayer text but can be linked via language to the other ones. Other subjects might have some tenuous links but don’t force them. It is better to get the most important philosophical links and any more are a bonus. Don’t lose sight of the explanation and clarification by swamping your essay with too many links. Try to keep all links down to a single sentence if possible. Context First paragraph of the section, setting the scene for Ayer’s argument against the possibility of meaningful ‘God-talk’. It establishes Ayer’s key claim that metaphysical statements cannot be true or false, and so cannot be meaningful. Ayer then goes on to contrast this position with more typical forms of atheism and agnosticism, and elaborates how ideas and so-called experiences of God are unintelligible. Argument / Interpretation Some points to consider: Philosophers are generally agreed that God cannot be demonstratively proved: true / false? Which philosophers, and why? This connects with atheism / unbelief topic. If the existence of God were probable, the claim that he exists would be an empirical hypothesis (based on sense perception). Do such beliefs have to be empirically verifiable? This connects with religious language topic: verification principle. Have theists regarded God as empirically verifiable? (Design argument, religious experience) Argument / Interpretation Some points to consider: The claim that God is apparent in the regularity of nature tells us nothing more than that the requisite regularity is present in nature, and does not really tell us about God himself. This connects with the design argument from AS. Ayer’s view fits with criticisms of that argument: it’s a bad analogy (Hume) and has been displaced by evolution (Dawkins). Perhaps there can be no knowledge of what is beyond the natural? Consider the counter-arguments. Argument / Interpretation Some points to consider: God is a transcendent being who might be known but could not be defined through empirical manifestations. This connects with religious language and religious experience topics (A2) and design argument (AS). Explain ‘transcendent being’: fair description of God? How might God be known through empirical manifestations? Is it impossible for God to be fully known (defined) through empirical manifestations? (Hick on verification). Argument / Interpretation Some points to consider: A metaphysical utterance cannot be true or false. Verification principle, cognitive / non-cognitive language, connecting with religious language topic. Consider logical positivism and Ayer’s view on verification. Compare / contrast with atheism / unbelief topic. What are the implications of dismissing metaphysical claims? Key terms you must deal with: proof, empirical hypothesis, transcendent, metaphysical. Secondary Points Although the main focus is on religious language, Ayer also raises: - The design argument for God’s existence - Atheism Also, by implication (talking about ‘manifestations’), we might say that religious experience is relevant to what Ayer is saying. Contribution Here Ayer makes a major contribution to the debate surrounding religious language. He takes a very firm approach, based on the verification principle. Ayer’s views may be contrasted with those of other philosophers in the religious language topic. Evaluation – Part (b) This will depend on your own personal perspective, but you would have to address the following issues: - Is Ayer right about metaphysical claims being unverifiable and meaningless? - What are the key strengths / weaknesses of Ayer’s verificationist position? - Are there any decent alternatives to what Ayer is saying? - Is Ayer’s understanding of God adequate? - What are the implications of saying that God’s existence is not even probable? - What are the implications of saying that metaphysical terms are meaningless? You would also have to discuss further the implications of these views for religion and human experience Context This second paragraph develops Ayer’s claim that God-talk is meaningless and that God’s existence is not even probable. Here, Ayer demonstrates the implications of his view for atheism and agnosticism. These perspectives are misguided, because they assume that religious language is meaningful. In the next paragraph, Ayer will move on to consider and dismiss the possibility of a nonempirical or super-empirical God. Argument / Interpretation Some points to consider: It is characteristic for an atheist to hold it to be at least probable that God does not exist. Which examples could we give? Perhaps consider David Hume. Make connections with A2 topic unbelief and atheism. The atheist’s assertion that there is no God is equally nonsensical as the claim that God exists. Here, Ayer must have in mind his verification principle – the statement could not be demonstrated either analytically or synthetically. This connects with A2 religious language topic. How do you think that someone like Richard Dawkins would respond to this claim? Argument / Interpretation Some points to consider: The statement that ‘there is a transcendent God’ does not express a proposition at all. There is some controversy over this claim – mystics might claim to have experienced the transcendent God. This connects with the A2 topic religious experience. Can God in principle be verified? Perhaps consider John Hick’s arguments regarding verification, that religious claims in principle might be verifiable. Key terms you must deal with: atheists, agnostics, nonsensical assertion, transcendent God. Secondary Points The passage is primarily concerned with unbelief and religious language. Some secondary points you might briefly raise are: How theistic argument might contradict what Ayer is saying (e.g. the design argument (AS topic). Perhaps it makes sense to ask whether God exists. Perhaps also consider falsification (Anthony Flew). Can the claim that ‘God does not exist’ be falsified? Contribution Here Ayer makes a significant contribution to the debates surrounding atheism and agnosticism, by provocatively claiming that disbelief in God is just as meaningless as belief in God. His views can be contrasted with more familiar forms of atheism. Evaluation – Part (b) Address the following issues: Is what Ayer is suggesting just a different form of atheism? Are atheist statements really nonsensical? How would someone like Richard Dawkins explain atheism instead? What role would science play in this? Evaluate verification: is it of any use for understanding atheism? What are the implications of saying that atheism is just as meaningless as theism? Should we forget about the God debate? What are the implications of putting verification into practice? Context In this third paragraph, Ayer continues his argument that God-talk is nonsense. Having suggested that atheism and agnosticism are concerned with a meaningless problem (paragraph B), he now argues that a non-empirical personal God is devoid of meaning. Ayer will then go on to relate this argument to views which theists themselves hold and claims about their experience. Argument / Interpretation Some points to consider: “Cases where deities are identified with natural objects” refers to the desire of some atheists to give naturalistic accounts of religion (e.g. Freud). This connects with atheism / unbelief topic in A2. Ayer allows that this kind of nature worship might mean something but points out that modern believers have tried to go beyond it. Is Ayer right that this less sophisticated but more empirical approach to religion might have more meaning? Argument / Interpretation Some points to consider: But could God be known indirectly through natural processes (like a thunder storm)? This view might be reflected in some forms of the design argument (AS topic), particularly Swinburne’s argument from beauty. Is it foolish to claim that a thunder storm might indirectly reflect upon the power and beauty of God’s work? Ayer suggests that a God ‘beyond’ such experiences would not make sense, but others would disagree. Argument / Interpretation Some points to consider: The idea of a God with non-empirical attributes makes no sense. This is because of Ayer’s verification principle – the need for scientific testing. However, theists may point to the idea of perfection, which cannot in the case of God be known simply or empirically. This is the case with the ontological argument for God (A2 topic); God is the greatest thing we can conceive, rather than experience. Is this really nonsense? The idea of a non-empirical God could never be verified. Again, this ties to the A2 religious language topic. Explain verification principle and logical positivism. Is Ayer right? Key terms you must deal with: super-empirical attributes, empirically verifiable, transcendent object. Secondary Points This passage is concerned with the idea that a non-empirical God is meaningless. However, Ayer touches on some secondary points: Naturalistic accounts of religion (“identified with natural objects”), such as that given by Freud. Is the ‘basic’ form of religion just a projection of the human mind onto the world around? “Awe of natural process” in modern times is often reflected in the Design Argument for God. Contribution Here Ayer attacks a key basis of theism – the idea that God could exist despite not being directly observable. The whole idea of non-empirical qualities is discarded as nonsense. This is important, because there are many things in our lives which are non-empirical. Evaluation – Part (b) Address the following issues: Is a non-empirical God really less meaningful than, say, simple nature worship? Is it possible to make a logical case for a God beyond our experiences? Is the verification principle really able to demonstrate that the idea of a non-empirical God is meaningless? What are the implications of seeing non-empirical matters as meaningless? What are the implications of discarding God? Context This short paragraph simply clarifies Ayer’s aims. He is interested in religious language, rather than the history or future of religion. It links his criticism of religious truth claims in the first three paragraphs to the rest of his discussion of theism. Argument / Interpretation Consider: “Causes of religious feelings” – again this may tie to naturalistic accounts of faith, such as those of Freud. Contrast Ayer with Freud, since Ayer is only concern with language, not psychology. This makes a good tie with atheism / unbelief (A2). “Possibility of religious knowledge” – i.e. all that Ayer cares about is how religious language cannot be verified. This connects with the A2 topic of religious language. Key terms to deal with: Causes of religious feeling, transcendent truth. Secondary Points Ayer does not get involved in the discussion of the causes of religious feelings, but he alludes to the fact that this debate is happening (see above). Contribution Ayer’s contribution has nothing to do with the explanation of religion, only with the argument that it does not mean anything. Evaluation – Part (b) Consider: Is Ayer correct to ignore the causes of religious feelings? Surely, if religious language is nonsense, Ayer should be able to explain why such nonsensical language came to be used. Evaluate verification principle: “possibility of religious knowledge”. What are the implications of seeing religious language as meaningless? Context Having set out his main argument (in the first four paragraphs) that religious language is meaningless, Ayer here attempts to show that his views connect with the claims of theists (people who believe in God). He will then give further consideration to the claims of mystics in the next paragraph. Argument / Interpretation Points to consider: Theists believe that “God is a mystery which transcends human understanding”. Which theists? This connects with two A2 topics: religious experience and religious language. You should be able to explain mysticism. You should also explain what non-literal accounts of religious language (analogy, symbol) have to say about this. Argument / Interpretation Points to consider: “What is unintelligible cannot be significantly described” – this takes us back to A2 religious language and verification. Ayer decides what is intelligible (or not) by applying the verification principle. Explain this and the logical positivists. Consider alternate perspectives such as Hick or Swinburne. The object of “purely mystical intuition” cannot be intelligible to reason. This needs to be discussed in light of A2 religious experience. How have some philosophers assessed mystical experiences? Might Swinburne have something to say in defence of mystics, against Ayer? Key terms you must consider: theists, ‘transcends the human understanding’, ‘mystical intuition’, ‘impossible to define God in intelligible terms’. Secondary Points The main thrust deals with the inability of theists to give meaningful description to God. However, Ayer also touches upon: The question of whether God is known through reason or faith. Mysticism – a form of religious experience Contribution Ayer is advancing a fairly bold and original argument, that theists themselves really believe that God is meaningless. He justifies this by observing that theists readily admit that God cannot be fully described. Evaluation – Part (b) Consider: - Is Ayer correct in his claim that God cannot be defined or described? - Are mystics really “bound to talk nonsense”? - Could we account for religious experience in any other way? - What would the implications be for ignoring religious experiences? - What are the implications of seeing God as indefinite, un-provable? Context Having discussed how common theistic attitudes connect with his argument about meaning in religious language, Ayer now looks at mysticism specifically. The view that God cannot be described suggests that God is unintelligible. Argument / Interpretation Points to consider: Mystics claim to know through intuition. This ties directly to A2 religious experience. You should be able to explain what mysticism is and consider why Ayer views it as he does. Gives examples. Do they have no way of expressing what they experience? Argument / Interpretation Points to consider: Mysticism is not a “cognitive state”. This links with A2 religious language: distinguish cognitive and non-cognitive language. Why does Ayer think that mysticism is non-cognitive? Verification. Why might some theists claim that mysticism is cognitive? A ‘real’ experience could be tested empirically – this is the verification principle pure and simple. Argument / Interpretation The mystic “merely gives us indirect information about the condition of his own mind”. A2 religious experience. What other critics of religious experience have said something similar? On what grounds might someone dispute this? Tests for authenticity – Swinburne: how would these tests contradict what Ayer is saying? Key terms you must consider: mystic, intuition, cognitive faculty, intelligible propositions, empirically determined. Secondary Points The thrust of Ayer’s argument rejects the idea of mystical experience, but he also incidentally raises secondary issues: Cognitivism / non-Cognitivism (this is a factor in ethics, as well as religion) Reliability and validation of experiences Psychology – “information about the issue of his own mind”. Are religious experiences signs of delusion? Contribution Ayer here builds on his general dismissal or religion with a distinctive rejection of personal and mystical intuition – it is nonsense. Evaluation – Part (b) Consider: Is mystical language necessarily non-cognitive? Does our inability to test what the mystic knows really matter? What else can’t we test? Does a rejection of mysticism lead to a rejection of theism? What are the implications of dismissing religious and mystical experience? What are the implications of seeing knowledge as something which always requires an empirical test? Context Ayer has argued that the concept of God is meaningless because it is non-empirical (makes no reference to sense experience). Similarly, mystical experiences mean nothing, because they cannot be tested with the senses. Here he argues that religious experience as a whole can be discounted because it cannot be verified (by contrast with simple everyday experiences). Argument / Interpretation Points to consider: Is it “logically possible for men to be immediately acquainted with God”? This links in with your A2 religious experience topic. Swinburne and other would maintain that this is quite possible. However, note the weakness of the ‘direct awareness’ argument – it’s not good enough to say that ‘I just know’ that I’ve experienced God. Surely we need criteria for determining the truth of religious experiences, as Swinburne suggests. Is this or Ayer’s perspective more convincing? Argument / Interpretation Points to consider: Are religious experiences really different from ‘normal’ experiences in that they cannot be verified? This links our A2 topics of religious experience and religious language together. This raises logical positivism and the verification principle. Some would claim that religious experiences can be in some ways verified, or at least aspects of religious experiences. Look at attempts to check the authenticity of religious experiences (RC Church, Swinburne). This also links to the problem of ‘disanalogies’ between religious and normal sense experiences (J.L. Mackie); note that Alston is not convinced that religious experiences really are different from all of our other experiences. Argument / Interpretation Points to consider: “… genuine synthetic proposition which could be empirically verified” – but what do we mean by “empirically verified”? Links to A2 topic religious language and verification. But does the verification principle really prove that things exist, or just that they are perceived by many people? Ayer had to distinguish between the strong and weak principles because he realised that hardly anything can be really verified in the strict sense. What about events such as Our Lady of Fatima (links to A2 religious experience), when thousands of witnesses claimed to have seen the same peculiar solar activity? Key terms you must deal with: ‘argument from religious experience’, ‘immediately acquainted with God’, transcendent being, empirically verified, ‘no literal significance’. Secondary Points Ayer’s main point is an attack on religious experience, but he raises other issues: When should we / should we not believe a person? Are there general differences between ‘normal’ and ‘religious’ experiences? Contribution Here Ayer adds fuel to the fire of the religious experience debate by being very negative about any possibility of religious experiences. He puts forward a bold idea: it is always irrational to believe someone who is making claims which could never be tested? Evaluation Consider: Are religious experiences really in another category to normal experiences? Is Ayer being completely honest here? Can we test religious experiences? What does verification really mean? What are the implications of following the verification principle strictly? Can we do it? What are the implications of ignoring religious experience? What are the implications of not believing people who cannot offer us empirically verifiable propositions? What would the world be like if we were all verificationists? Context Ayer concludes this essay with a firm rejection of religious experience and, indeed, all religious and moral knowledge. This builds on his general argument that non-empirical and unverifiable claims are meaningless. Argument / Interpretation Points to consider: Argument from religious experience is false / flawed. But is it? This connects with A2 topic religious experience. What counter-arguments are there to what Ayer is saying? He thinks it’s flawed because of the verification principle – see A2 religious language. Explain this and the logical positivists. Argument / Interpretation Points to consider: Religious experiences are interesting from a psychological point of view. Which psychologists have taken an interest? A2 religious experience. Have psychologists arrived at similar or different conclusions to Ayer? Religious claims are non-cognitive. This links to A2 religious language. Consider verification. Is this true? What are the key strengths and weaknesses of this approach to language? Argument / Interpretation Points to consider: Meaningful language has to work in a scientific system. Is that true? Consider language games and Wittgenstein in A2 rel. language. Key terms you must consider: ‘psychological point of view’, religious knowledge, moral knowledge, empirically verifiable, ‘system … which constitutes science’. Secondary Points Ayer concludes by the whole idea of religious experience or knowledge, but he also touches upon secondary points: What religion tells us from a psychological point of view. The possibility (or lack!) of moral knowledge. The link between language and science. Contribution Ayer’s final paragraph contributes a remarkable and controversial argument: there could never be such a thing as religious knowledge or moral knowledge (note that addition). Meaningful language has to be incorporated into a system of science. Evaluation Consider: Must religious language be meaningless? Must the argument fail? Is there no such thing as moral knowledge either? Are there any problems associated with this view? What are the implications of seeing language as purely scientific? Does psychology agree with what Ayer claims here? What are the implications of Ayer’s radical conclusion? What are the implications of eliminating religious or moral truth claims? What are the implication of seeing language as just a matter of science? Paragraph 1: Why we can't demonstratively prove God, so Hume and Kant's criticisms of the classical arguments for God's existence (Ontological, Design and Cosmological). I'd only worry about 1 criticism for each, just mention them in passing Why existence of God isn't provable (according to Ayer): Verification Principle (strong and weak forms) Regularity in nature is not God, so reference Kant here (see above) Metaphysical is no good - some may argue AntiRealism says otherwise Paragraph 2: Atheism/Agnosticism = no good - reference Hume's criticism of the Ontological argument (can't reason something into existence or nonexistence Anselm's Fool - can understand God, so gives it meaning. Also Anti-Realism can be mentioned here too Ideas of the Verification Principle Paragraph 3: Language games - words mean certain things for certain religious groups Aquinas - have to talk of God analogically (at the end of the paragraph) Myth & symbol Kant's idea of God being external to the world Anti-Realism & Anselm's Fool (at the end of the paragraph) Paragraph 4: Dawkins' Memes (I guess) Paragraph 5: Christian doctrine - the Trinity is external & a mystery, not literal Ideas of religious experience Paragraph 6: Logical Positivists - need empirical proof Examples of mystics & what they say - Julian of Norwich, for example. Describing the experiences in ordinary language would take away their meaning. Ayer - they're meaningless anyway Wittgenstein, Vicious Circle, etc Ayer suggests something that is not understandable contains no facts Paragraph 7: Verification Principle Falsification Principle Effect on society = negative: 9/11 Effect on society = positive: Martin Luther King Paragraph 8: Freud Moral knowledge - Intuitionism, Naturalism, Aquinas Reference Donovan's article & H.P. Owen - ideas over what role intuition plays Science - Dawkins Russell - "there is no difference between the man who drinks much and sees snakes and the man who eats little and sees God" Support for Ayer: -To say that something is transcendent is to admit that it is beyond your understanding, so how can you have experience of it? How can you even attempt to describe it accurately if you have no idea what the beyond entails? -Falsification – development of verif. -Just because there is regularity in nature doesn’t conclusively postulate God’s existence – too big a leap – illogical – David Hume (Cosmo+Teleo criticisms). -when he says ‘the mere existence of the noun is enough to foster the illusion that there is a real…’ could bring in Freud= ‘universal neurosis’ and Marx, Dawkins= ‘delusion’ etc. -Russell – universe is a BRUTE FACT and nothing more. -Swinburne says it is probable: more arguments for than against…and we should believe what people say unless there is evidence to contrary (Principles of Credulity and Testimony). -Descartes famously dismissed his senses as unreliable as they can deceive you (use examples of illusions/mirages etc). -As an empiricist, Ayer ignores a priori arguments such as the Ont. Arg. -Hick – eschatological verification (Celestial City) parable -VERIFICATION PRINCIPLE ITSELF CANNOT BE VERIFED…ALL AYER’S WORK IS FLAWED. -Ayer himself said at a later date that most of his early work was false. (If you have explained about his weak verification) – this allows for some religious statements to be considered meaningful because they are historical e.g: Jesus rose from the dead. -Ayer ignores religious experiences that are not ineffable, only focusing on discrediting those that cannot be explained (mystics) -Even if it is meaningless to him, religious language, or ‘God-talk’ is meaningful to a massive proportion of the population (and has been for centuries). -Swinburne/Basil Mitchell/R.M.Hare/Tillich/Aquinas…all say religious language is meaningful even if it doesn’t convey knowledge…THEREFORE it is not nonsense (the title), just not a cognitive fact…but it still has a purpose/meaning. -Religious experiences are NOETIC (William James) that is they impart knowledge that it beyond human understanding – just because something cannot be verbalised doesn’t mean it is meaningless…it just exposes the limits and inadequacies of human language. -You can have/feel emotions that you can’t describe – they still exist and are true. -REDUCTIONISM - concept argued by many 20th century philosophers who felt that religious ideas were in need of reinterpretation and that religious language should not be seen as being about the 'transcendant' or 'metaphysical' as it is really about life and the things that we all experience. Therefore rel.lang is no longer seen as a problem because it is about our own psychology and sociology, not a transcendant being. BUT this undermines the existence of an omnipotent, omniscient God of classical theism. -Braithwaite argued religious language is really moral discourse...BUT Ayer and verification reject moral discourse. -Final sentence 'and all such...constitutes science'...well no actually - Popper highlighted the fact that science deals in falsification not verification. Typical Introduction (‘context’) to an Ayer Essay (made up of two parts) – Part 1 (1) In his essay ‘God-Talk is Evidently Nonsense’ A.J. Ayer argues that all talk of God is meaningless because it cannot be verified. Any talk of God, even from an atheistic or agnostic perspective, must be meaningless because it deals with the non-empirical. Ayer takes the view that this debate about God should not even be entered into. God’s existence is, he claims, “not even probable”. The ultimate basis for this is Ayer’s Verification Principle and his agreement with Logical Positivism: metaphysical and unscientific ideas must be rejected. (2) [… In this specific passage, however, the focus is upon …] his controversial claim that God’s existence is not even probable. Ayer separates himself from other religious perspectives, surprisingly including atheism and agnosticism, and goes onto critique these views. Ayer does this through highlighting the point that the atheist’s arguments against God cannot be tested any more than God’s existence can be tested in general. He then argues that agnostics are equally wrong as, by entering into the question of whether God exists or not, agnosticism accepts that this is a genuine question. Ayer argues that statements about God cannot be empirically verifiable and so they are meaningless, regardless of whether they are positive or negative. Standard Paragraph’ on Ayer and verification (self assembly model) See how it’s easy to drop in a memorised chunk of text to explain the idea of verification as it arises in Ayer’s essay. You can assemble a paragraph from a few key pieces: (1) [What the passage says] … “In this passage Ayer argues that … [e.g.] the notion of a person whose essential attributes are non-empirical is not an intelligible notion at all. By this, Ayer implies that the traditional transcendent concept of God is meaningless, because His qualities cannot be known through sense data. They cannot be verified.” (2) [Your learned material – write your own] … “The idea of empirical verification, often mentioned by Ayer, ultimately derives from the Logical Positivists – an early 20th century school of philosophy influenced by the work of Ludwig Wittgenstein. These philosophers sought to establish undeniable truths which could be determined through science, searching for answers in response to the atrocities experienced in World War I. Ayer and other Positivists developed the ‘Verification Principle’, the theory that unless a proposition can be analytically or synthetically verified, then it is meaningless. In relation to God-talk, or any aspect of faith, these tough standards of verification seem to rule out religious truths.” (3) [Refer back to the wording of the passage] … [e.g.] “So it is that God, the being of non-empirical attributes, cannot be verified and accordingly should be rejected.”. Verbal keys which might prompt this paragraph: Empirical hypothesis – ideas we can test with evidence Empirical verification – testing through evidence Verification – testing / checking Intelligible – makes sense / meaningful Meaningful / meaningful proposition – meaningful statement ‘Standard Paragraph’ on Ayer’s rejection of theism Again, the same process can be used for another key theme in Ayer – the rejection of theism (belief in God). Combine the following parts to form a paragraph: (1) [What the passage says] … [e.g.] “In this part of the text, Ayer argues that ‘no sentence which purports to describe the nature of a transcendent god can possess any literal significance’, thus indicating his rejection of theism. Ayer does not regard belief in God as having any linguistic or logical sense to it.” (2) [Your learned material] … “Throughout this essay, Ayer claims that the existence of God is not empirically verifiable; it cannot be tested with the evidence of the senses. However, some theists would argue that God can be known through the evidence of nature or the exercise of reason. This is seen in the natural theology of philosophers like Thomas Aquinas or William Paley. Some might see such arguments as a form of verification. Theists might also appeal to religious experience as a basis for theism, if this is judged to be reliable (see the work of Richard Swinburne). So, Ayer is making quite an assumption here; he supposes that belief in God is not evidence based and that arguments for God do not work, a view which some would challenge.” (3) [Refer back to the wording of the passage] … [e.g.] “Therefore, Ayer’s claim that the idea of a transcendent God has no literal significance forms a controversial argument. Theism is described as a non-rational belief, without much consideration for views to the contrary.” Verbal keys which might prompt this paragraph: God / God-talk Transcendent / metaphysical being ‘Standard Paragraph’ on Ayer and atheism Same process, link the appropriate bits to comment on the text in front of you: (1) [What the passage says] … [e.g.] “In this part of the text, Ayer claims that it is important not to confuse his arguments with those commonly adopted by atheists or agnostics. That is to say, Ayer is not concerned to discuss the question of whether God exists, or answer it negatively or positively. On the contrary, Ayer rejects all talk of God (even in a negative way) because he regards this as unverifiable and thus meaningless.” (2) [Your learned material] … “It is easy to find examples of how Ayer’s views contrast with common forms of atheism or agnosticism. For instance, atheists have argued that scientific explanations for our universe are more probably than God, who is described by Richard Dawkins for example as a piece of ‘bad science’. Atheists have also attempted to build logical arguments against theism, as in the problem of evil and suffering (Epicurus, Hume, Mackie). Ayer, by contrast, is not interested in any of this evidence for atheism, since he does not regard God’s existence as a meaningful proposition in the first place.” (3) [Refer back to the wording of the passage] … [e.g.] “So, Ayer’s comment here that ‘all utterances about the nature of God are nonsensical’ is not a typical atheist view. Most atheists would consider the real possibility of God before rejecting it on the basis of evidence or logical argument. Agnostics would be undecided, but would regard God as a genuine possibility.” Verbal keys which might prompt this paragraph: Atheism / agnosticism / non-existence of God Much of religious belief and practice is meaningless. Worship ceremonies, scriptures, stories of religious experience; all are unverifiable and therefore meaningless. Does this mean that religion should be abolished, ridiculed, reduced to the bits that work (e.g. helping others) or just left to wither and die? Religious experiences are all in the mind: people claiming to have mystical experiences should probably be treated as psychiatric patients. The idea of design and purpose in the world is meaningless as it cannot be verified. Beliefs about life after death are meaningless, so there is no hope of post-mortem existence. There are no ultimate moral values, only opinions. This would make it impossible to condemn the actions of another, because that implies that there are moral facts that we can measure each other by. Theories such as Natural Law and Utilitarianism are wrong because they confuse opinions (e.g. preserving life is good) with facts such as natural law and pleasure. Life has no meaning or ultimate purpose. Might this cause a collapse in society: do we need to believe that there is a higher power or purpose to make us want to strive to be better? Perhaps religious belief should be treated as an illness or as a psychological problem? Any knowledge based on intuition is false and is not knowledge, because it cannot be verified: this contradicts Donovan, who allows that intuitions can be meaningful (but not facts). All arguments from atheism (e.g. Marx, Freud etc) or from agnosticism are meaningless, because they discuss the existence of God. Might we have to get rid of the word ‘God’ from the language altogether? So too subjective values judgements (beauty), which can never be verified. Subjective perceptions of other people (love, trust) would also become meaningless; they cannot be verified. We all assume intuitive knowledge of others ('I know he loves me', 'deep down she's a caring person') but for Ayer this would all be nonsense. The consequences of verification go far beyond religion, because it is a comprehensive theory of language. (I wonder how he got out of bed in the morning!?) This of course contradicts people like Owen mentioned in Donovan, who believed that this type of intuitive belief could be taken pretty much as fact. In his essay ‘Can we know God by experience?’ Peter Donovan questions whether it is possible to have direct, intuitive knowledge of God. After setting out this question, he considers the views of 20th century theologians and philosophers (like H.P. Owen) who have argued that religious experiences may provide knowledge of God, through intuition. Donovan points out how this idea of intuitive knowledge of God fits with established Christian ways of thinking: God is a personal being who acts in history. He then distinguishes psychological feelings of certainty from actually being right on logical grounds, and associates intuitive awareness of God with the former. Donovan points out that our sense of certainty is often mistaken, an observation he takes from Bertrand Russell. Although he considers the possibility that experience of God might be a type of personal encounter (I-You), Donovan rejects the idea that this is itself a form of knowledge. He does not accept that intuition can provide knowledge of God, but claims that this point does not undermine the value of religious experiences altogether. In paragraphs 3 & 4, however, Donovan’s focus is upon what intuition is and how it might connect with the topic of religion. He points out how ordinary and common feelings of intuition are – these sensations are part of everyday life. Donovan gives examples of intuition in practice, where people claim that they ‘just know’ moral or mathematical propositions are true. Donovan questions whether intuition should apply to religion too; can religious experience be a source of conviction without any further argument? That deals with part (a) ‘context’ in the essay plan you have. For the argument/interpretation main section, I would aim to develop just a few key points from this passage: - “Don’t confuse me with arguments” – some people would prefer not to argue about theism but make a personal (intuitive?) judgement. Compare with rational approaches to theism / atheism. - “The experience of being confident … intuition” – what intuition is in this essay, who says what about it, and what Donovan thinks of it. Could compare this with moral intuitionism. - Does “religious experience also give us the right to say we know?” What is religious experience? How is it used as a source of knowledge? Arguments from religious experience. The secondary points are already clear. I would just reemphasise key themes like theism/atheism, intuitions/intuitionism, and religious experience. The first bit just sets out the question for the essay: 1) Why bother arguing ‘from’ religious experience (inductively) if you just know God’s real from personal experience / awareness? 2) Claiming to know stuff without having reasons seems risky / wrong: evil dictators have done terrible things on the basis of misguided beliefs. Maybe it’s even insane. Yet, many believers think they know God personally by experience. 3) However, there are lots of things we think we ‘just know’ by intuition. It’s perfectly ordinary to suppose that we know things without further argument. 4) But does that apply to religion too? Do we ‘just know’ about religion through intuition? Do we have the right to say we know about religion intuitively? The next bit considers knowledge from intuition: 5) A number of theologians and philosophers have claimed that we can know things about religion just from intuition. On the one hand, God can be known indirectly through the basic finite stuff of the world, but that’s only part of the picture (i.e. there could be experience of God too). 6) Some writers have drawn attention to other things we ‘just know’ through intuition and have gone on to argue that this can also apply to religious interpretations of our experiences. Intuition grasps knowledge of God. 7) H.P. Owen claimed that we get a grasp on the material world and other people through intuition – we ‘just know’ that they are real, conscious, etc. and the same applies to the believer’s grasp of God: (a) As we know people through actions, we know God through creation (b) A person’s inner self can be revealed to us, so too with God in Christ (c) Actions reveal a person’s self and character, so too God’s character can be seen in nature. (d) As we can grasp that a person brings about certain effects, so we realise that God creates certain realities. 8) In all of these cases, intuition has ‘mediated immediacy’ (it feels very real/close but is not direct knowledge). God would not be the product of reason here, but would be encountered through other experiences (e.g. experience of his creation). 9) Of course, intellectual reasoning also has a role. It can make things clearer, or supply some key ideas which help intuition along. However, in religious experience God is really known through intuition. [QUOTE: H.P. Owen] The basic form of Christian experience is the apprehension of God to which I have given the names of ‘intuition’ and ‘faith’. All forms of experience are modes of this one fundamental form; they are all expressions of this primary awareness. [Basically …] The basic Christian experience is intuition (‘just knowing’ God). All the other types of Christian religious experiences are simply different versions of this. 10) Having decided that knowledge of God pretty much amounts to intuition, Owen then goes on to treat all religious experiences as forms of knowledge. (Similarly, given that we assume that other people exist, we carry on assuming that they’re real when we have dealings with them and see their bodily actions.) 11) According to Owen, God’s reality underlies all religious experiences, and this arises in many ways. [QUOTE: H.P. Owen] The sense of God’s reality can occur in various contexts. It can be produced by the contemplation of beauty and order in nature, by meditation on the words of Scripture, by participation in the Church’s liturgy, by some event within our personal existence. Yet it may not have any assignable cause or channel; it may come uninvited. And although it is more likely to occur in moods of quiet recollection, it can occur when our minds are troubled by the secular pressures of life. [Basically …] We get the sense that God exists by looking at beauty in nature, thinking about the Bible, going to Church, or through personal experiences. Yet, we might not know why we get such experiences. They might happen when we are quiet and thoughtful, but they can happen when we’re busy with our daily lives. 12) The idea of knowing God through intuition is attractive to Christians, because it fits with the Bible. There, God communicates with humanity and is known through nature – experiences are signs and symbols through which he is known. [QUOTE: D.H. Baillie] Because nature is God’s and He is its creator, it lends itself to His use, and He can make its natural elements to speak sacramentally to us; not in the sense of a ‘natural theology’ which can prove the purpose of God from a mere contemplation of nature, but in the sense that God by His Word can use, and therefore we by our faith can use, natural objects… as sacramental expressions of His mercy and faithfulness. [Basically …] Because God made nature, he can communicate through it ‘sacramentally’ (i.e. through actions which have an inner sacred/spiritual meaning). This is not to say that we can prove God through studying nature (‘natural theology’) but we can experience God’s mercy and faithfulness through his natural objects. 13) This idea of intuition of God also fits with the idea of ‘faith’ – human response to God. Faith is not just belief without evidence; it is an intuitive response to God. [QUOTE: H.H. Farmer] The essential content of revelation is… God Himself, and not general truths about God or the universe or immortality or the way of duty; though such truths are implicit in the divine selfgiving, as this is mediated ever more richly to the responsive soul in the changing situations of life, and are capable of reflective formulation. And the proper response to revelation is … faith, faith being not an intellectual assent to general truths, but the decisive commitment of the whole person in active obedience to, and quiet trust in the divine will apprehended as rightfully sovereign and utterly trustworthy at one and the same time. [Basically …] Revelation is an encounter with God, not a source of truths about God. Such truths are however implicit in God’s self-giving presence. The response to that is faith – not just agreeing to truths about God but committing personally to obeying Him (who is trustworthy). 14) The believer’s knowledge of God is intuitive; it requires no further argument. The next bit discusses feeling certain and being right 15) Despite its popularity among some writers and Christians, the views about intuition of God expressed above have been criticised by modern philosophers. This isn’t just an anti-religious bias, but reflects concerns about appealing to intuition in the case of God. 16) Critics of religious intuition distinguish between psychological certainty (feeling certain) and rational certainty (being right). 17) Obviously, one can feel certain without being right. If I feel certain of the time, I can still check that against my watch. However, I can’t check the rightness of my watch against my feeling of certainty. It’s not the feeling which makes us right, no matter how convinced we are. 18) Being right is not a state of mind (not a way we feel), but has to do with how our beliefs relate to states of affairs (how things are). 19) The problems of feeling certain also apply to intuitive knowledge. The sense of having an intuition (‘I just know that …’) may seem clear and direct (‘someone is watching me’). Sometimes these feelings are right; this tempts us to think that having an intuition amounts to being right. 20) Question: if you only have intuition to go on, how do you know that your feeling counts as proper intuition? Perhaps you don’t remember the ‘intuitive feel’ properly. Can you use intuition to check on intuition? 21) We cannot take for granted the reliability of intuition as a source of knowledge. Sometimes intuition is right, but that’s just the chance of the situation. Even with the example of intuitionally ‘just knowing’ other people, that sense of certainty could be wrong. [QUOTE: Bertrand Russell] One of the most notable examples of intuition is the knowledge people believe themselves to possess of those with whom they are in love. The wall between different personalities seems to become transparent, and people think they see into another soul as into their own. Yet deception in such cases is constantly practised with success; and even where there is no intentional deception, experience gradually proves, as a rule, that the supposed insight was illusory, and that the slower more groping methods of the intellect are in the long run more reliable. [Basically …] People in love think they have an intuitive knowledge of the other person, seeing his/her soul. Yet partners/spouses often deceive each other and the ‘insight’ was wrong. In the long run, intellect and evidence is more reliable than intuition. 22) Intuitive religious experience suffers from exactly the same difficulties. Terms like ‘encounter’ assume that the thing encountered (God) is real, but his existence is exactly what is at issue. 23) Also, it’s not enough to say that we accept what our senses tell us, or that there are other people, without argument. Our knowledge of the senses is something that we can test. For our knowledge of other people, we have the analogy that we ourselves exist while being in a normal and observable body. 24) In other areas where we rely on our intuition (e.g. investing money), it’s difficult to say whether we’re right. Religion is very diverse and open to disagreement – does that mean that intuition works better here? (E.g. compare gambling on the stock market). There are so many different religious intuitions and different people; surely intuition cannot be reliable? 25) Just because there are some accepted intuitions (e.g. 2+2=4), it does not follow that there is a general and accepted intuitive way of knowing. What counts as knowledge of God is doubted and disputed, so we could not agree what we could work out through intuition, even if we accept that intuition is sometimes reliable. 26) Of course, Owen and Lewis aren’t arguing that Christianity is true simply because the believer intuitively ‘just knows’ it. They are trying to describe Christianity as an interpretation of our human experiences. (E.g. I experience this that and the other, and interpret it as being God’s presence affecting my life). 27) But the central position given to intuition of God has been criticised by philosophers. 28) Despite the criticisms, it doesn’t mean that experiences of God are illusions. If Christianity were true, it is likely that people would be directly aware of God’s reality. But how can we know whether the impression that we’re aware of God can be reliable? The next bit explores ‘knowledge about’ and ‘experience of’ 29) Theologians (people who study God) who argue that God is known by immediate encounter base their views on ‘person-to-person’ knowledge. There’s a special kind of knowledge in encountering a conscious person, rather than just an object. 30) Philosopher Martin Buber wrote about this in I and Thou. [QUOTE: Martin Buber] The world is twofold for man in accordance with his twofold attitude. The attitude of man is two fold in accordance with the two basic words he can speak. The basic words are not single words but word pairs. One basic word is the pair I-You The other basic word is the pair I-It. [Basically …] Humans speak in two basic relationship terms: I-You, and I-It. 31) I-You relationships are person-to-person. They are not based on reason, and are profound but fragile. ‘It’ refers to objects and reason; without the person side one isn’t fully human. 32) Buber points to the biblical tradition which sees God as personal. If God is personal, we should think in I-You terms, rather than of ‘It’. So, in theology there can be a great difference between arguing about God and experiencing God personally. 33) That contrast can be related to Christianity. Faith has often been preferred to speculative thinking about God. 34) Also with I-You relationships, we often think that a personal encounter can’t be put into words. This may support the view that God is to be known in an I-You relationship. Why should a relationship with God be more subject to reasoned argument than person-to-person knowledge? Indeed, if you attempt to describe/analyse a personal encounter, then the relationship is broken and the person becomes an ‘It’. 35) Because the idea of encountering God in religious experience is so familiar to Christians, anyone relying on this needs to be aware of the philosophical problems it raises. This idea of knowledge through encounter has been strongly criticised. Three points needs to be discussed: (i) the sense of an encounter might be mistaken, (ii) having ‘experience of’ presupposes ‘knowledge about’, (iii) ‘experience of’ is not knowledge. 36) (i) sense of encounter may be mistaken. Like with intuition, the mere impression of certainty is no guide to whether this is true. 37) Russell reminded us that our intuitions about people can be wrong. The same is true of the I-You encounter. How do we know that we really have a personal connection with someone? Is that impression enough to go on? 38) TV and theatre shows us how supposed I-You relationships can be something different (e.g. a spy trusting a double-agent). Misinterpreted encounters are common. 39) Thus far, the critic’s point is just that ‘you may not be right’, and this won’t bother the convinced believer. But there’s more to it than that 40) (ii) having ‘experience of’ presupposes ‘knowledge about’. Preachers and theologians (people who study God) often point out that the biblical meaning of the word ‘know’ assumes a rich I-You relationship. Religious knowing is person to person knowing (Adam ‘knew his wife Eve’ Genesis 4.1). 41) Biblical knowledge is not theoretical, but enters into subjective relations (i.e. it is perceived personally). This is ‘existential’ knowledge (focused on human existence) rather than ‘scientific’ knowledge (based on theory and testing). [The footnote here attributes this view to the theologian Alan Richardson]. 42) If the believer has a direct experience of God, surely it’s inappropriate to force that experience into scientific terms. 43) However, just because scientific ‘knowledge about’ is not most important in personal relationships, that doesn’t mean that it’s irrelevant. E.g. Adam’s knowledge about Eve is assumed in his relationship with her; he knows that she exists. If he couldn’t be sure, Adam couldn’t have a relationship with her. 44) So, factual knowledge is important to personal knowledge. People too easily take it for granted that they can relate to God, as though knowledge about him is not problematic. 45) To the philosopher, knowledge about God is the very thing in question. It is only because religious experience might give knowledge about God that we investigate it in the first place. 46) That’s not to say that a philosopher can demand definite knowledge about God; a religious tradition might say that God is not an object (‘it’). But this causes a problem from the comparison with personal encounters, because people can be investigated. 47) With people, we can have knowledge about them without a personal encounter (I-It and not I-You), but we cannot have a personal encounter if we know nothing of them. So with God, the personal encounter assumes a good deal of knowledge about him (creator, etc.) 48) (iii) ‘Experience of’ if not in itself knowledge. Suppose God were experienced first-hand; it would not follow for certain that this counts as knowledge. We assume that people who have experienced things for themselves are in a better position for knowing truth, but why? Is firsthand experience actually better than second-hand knowledge? 49) There are situations in which a lack of first-hand experience really doesn’t matter; a male doctor can know much of pregnancy but never falls pregnant. 50) What if there were two experienced doctors, one male, but one a woman who has previously been pregnant? She would have extra firsthand experience. However, it isn’t just the additional experience which matters, but the impressions, memories, and information which comes from it. 51) It is knowledge about pregnancy which comes from being pregnant which gives the woman doctor an advantage, not just experience of pregnancy. Further, all her other knowledge (training, shared with male doctors) is necessary for her to learn from her experiences. 52) First-hand experience isn’t important because it is knowledge, but because it enables us to increase our knowledge. Knowledge isn’t just awareness; it comes from relating our experiences to the rest of our knowledge/experiences. 53) People might object that this places too much emphasis on learning/ knowledge about. Our personal encounters do presuppose knowledge of people, but that’s secondary to the feeling of I-You relationships. The same could be true of God. 54) That may be true; encounters with God/people may have non-intellectual reasons. It’s only a problem if people claim to know God just on the basis of such encounters. The fact is, though, that some believers do claim to have knowledge just on this basis; the arguments above show that this is inadequate. 55) The criticisms haven’t shown that awareness of God is an illusion, just that it cannot itself alone show that we have good reason to believe in God. The final bit discusses the sense of knowing God 56) The situations/experiences which lead people to talk of encountering God are crucial for religion; they keep it going. They give a sense of knowing God. 57) The philosophical difficulties of intuition/encounter/mysticism do not detract from their importance for religion. Religious people may claim that philosophers have ‘hardened their hearts’ and refuse to be open to God. 58) That’s a mistake; a fair number of modern philosophers are themselves religious believers. They wouldn’t want an important experience (God) to be discredited by weak arguments. 59) The chief point in philosophical criticism of ‘knowing God by experience’ is this. Religious reasoning has taken such experience to be a kind of knowledge, immediately available to those who have it. But knowledge doesn’t work like that. The sense of knowing isn’t on its own a complete sign of knowledge. 60) But if the sense of God doesn’t count as knowledge, what then? 61) That doesn’t mean that we discard religious experience. We don’t need to take an ‘all or nothing’ approach to it, as some critics or believers have. Answering on Donovan: Strategy and Tips Firstly, a reminder of some general pointers for paper 4: In part (a), follow up short quotations/summaries with longer explanation and analysis. (E.g. Here Donovan argues that knowledge is “not merely a matter of experiences”. By this he means… [detail follows]). In part (a) always links to other parts of the A Level course, naming scholars and technical terms. (E.g. When Donovan mentions “arguing from religious experience”, he refers to… [details from rel. exp. topic – inductive argument, Swinburne, etc.]). Answering on Donovan: Strategy and Tips (Continued) Define all technical terms. (E.g. By ‘intuition’ Donovan means…). Then use these terms yourself. Refer to the wider argument of the text. (E.g. Here Donovan argues that… Later on in the text he develops this point by…). In part (b), develop a critical appraisal of the passage. (E.g. The claim that personal awareness cannot alone provide sufficient reason for believing in God is justified. This is supported by…). In part (b), persistently use the phrases ‘the implication of this for religion is…’ or, ‘the implication of this for human experience is…’. You should draw out the implications of the passage and the implications of your response to it. What would happen if we agreed with the author, or if we agreed with you? Now some specific advice about Donovan: Be very clear in your own mind what ‘intuition’ is. You will need to use this term over and again. Any essay should define this and state Donovan’s basic view on this matter. Be clear on how this direct awareness contrasts with the inductive argument from religious experience. It’s probably worth writing separate short summary notes on each of the philosophers Donovan refers to (Owen, Buber, etc.) and clarifying on these what their arguments are, how they would agree/disagree with each other, and whether Donovan agrees/disagrees with them. For instance, it should be obvious that H.H. Farmer and Bertrand Russell definitely do not agree about intuition. Work out how direction intuition of God contrasts with some of the indirect logical reasons for God we have studied (especially arguments). A good answer might point out how mainstream philosophical ‘proofs’ of God have largely ignored this idea of intuition. Give examples of personal experiences, where relevant. For example, where Donovan writes of an encounter that “can’t be put into words”, you could give a classic example like St. Teresa of Avila (and explain). After looking at Buber, Donovan keeps using the term ‘IYou’. If this comes up, refer it back to Buber to explain what it means. You could produce a set of notes on ‘religious experience for Donovan’, picking out everything from the Paper 3 topic that’s relevant. Some Implications of Donovan If we agree (with H.P. Owen) that we may know God directly and intuitively, then the implications for this belief are as follows: FOR RELIGION We may reasonably claim that God exists It supports religious belief; it suggests that personal faith is valuable / correct Extremist branches of religion could use intuition to justify faith claims (nothing could be disproved or invalidated). God would no longer be seen as completely transcendent; God would be available to all. If God interacts with us through personal encounter, then why does he not intervene in our world (problem of evil, etc,)? Scriptural claims about direct encounter with God (e.g. Moses) would seem to be true. If all faith were entirely personal / individual, how would this effect religious conflict or cooperation? It would have profound, but uncertain implications. No reason for atheism / agnosticism FOR HUMAN EXPERIENCE Supports individualism / individualist thought and culture. Leads to a rejection of the verification principle in philosophy. We are justified in claiming that any of our personal, direct experience convey ‘truth’. Lead to a conflict with science? Intuition cannot be scientifically tested. Intuitive claims about ethics would also have to be accepted, along with religion. This leads to a highly subjective ethics (compare Intuitionism and G.E. Moore). If we agree (with Bertrand Russell, and other critics) that intuition may be faulty and cannot be used as the basis for knowledge-claims about God and our world, then the implications for this belief are as follows: FOR RELIGION Biblical claims of God’s encounters with creation may be false, as personal intuition of the divine seems discredited. Religions which are founded upon a personal encounter (Islam, Christianity) would be dubious, given that we can have no certainty about such intuitive claims to have met God. No highly experiential religious / sects (Pentecostalism, Evangelicalism) and no religious mysticism (Teresa of Avila, Sufism [Islam]). Religion is not helpful for making judgements about life / the world. Belief in God is weakened generally; personal experience is questioned. The argument from religious experience (Swinburne et al.) is weakened. FOR HUMAN EXPERIENCE Intuition would play a secondary role in the question for knowledge – evidence and verification would always be put first. Many everyday intuitive beliefs / ideas may be incorrect. This has a major impact on personal relationships, investment, gambling, simple beliefs about other people, etc. The individual would have to doubt oneself and beliefs – feelings of uncertainty would be supported. This would fit with intellectual critiques of religion (Ayer, Dawkins, Hitchens), which state that personal faith is irrational or a ‘virus’. There would be more atheists in our world. If we agree (with Peter Donovan) that we should avoid the ‘all or nothing’ approach to religious experience, allowing that it may be valuable when seen in conjunction with other beliefs / evidence, then the implications for this belief are as follows: FOR RELIGION We have to test religious statements and see them in relation to other religious claims, because they are not self-evidently true. We should not focus on only one argument / justification in religion (link this to Swinburne’s ‘leaky buckets’). There would be no scope for extreme atheism, as religious experiences could not be dismissed out of hand. Religious experiences / encounters may have subjective meaning, in relation to other beliefs, which fits with arguments about religious language (Wittgenstein). Perhaps religion makes sense as a whole. Religions would have to be self-critical and examine their beliefs / teachings. There is no scope for purely individualist claims being accepted. Donovan’s arguments strengthens agnosticism, since it allows that religious experiences are meaningful but do not provide definitive evidence. Religious encounters should not be used to justify harm against others, or to make narrowly exclusivist claims – they are too uncertain. FOR HUMAN EXPERIENCE To persuade others of our experiences, it would be necessary to have some supporting arguments or evidence. Our intuitions about other people may be correct, although it is necessary to anchor them in supporting information / evidence. Donovan implies that we should have a balanced, critical view of the world and our experiences. Personal intuition is not itself knowledge, but could fit with knowledge claims. Contrast this with more explicitly scientific approaches (Dawkins). Introduction 1.) Looking at the words, philosophical theology seems to have its focus on God (theos = God in Greek), while the philosophy of religion seems to have faith or practice of religion as its object. In the period between Hume/Kant up to Nietzsche (approximately 1750–1900), there was a shift in emphasis in philosophy away from God to religion. What to write about: the different philosophical emphasis given to God (Hegel) or to religion (Schleiermacher). What divided philosophers? Why did Hegel want to talk about God, while others wanted to talk about religion? - Also, deal with the names: Hume, Kant, and Nietzsche. You should write and learn a couple of sentences to explain each of the key philosophers in this text. 2.) Hegel didn’t like the idea that we cannot know God; he really valued the idea of having conceptual knowledge of God. Some people thought that we could speak of religion and “not of God Himself” – Hegel is having a dig at Schleiermacher (who emphasised feeling as the basis of religion). What to write about: More on the Hegel / Schleiermacher disagreement – you must understand this well for Westphal (see notes). - Key phrase: “assumption that we do not know God”. Sceptics like Ayer hold that we do not know God, but Hegel had in mind Romantics who thought that religion is about personal feeling. - Compare / contrast atheism with such perspectives. - Which authors have you studied who emphasise that we can have knowledge of God? … Aquinas, Anselm, Descartes, Swinburne, etc. Would they agree with Hegel? Write about how their views might bear on this issue. 3.) It’s difficult to separate talk of God and talk of religion. Hegel still points to something important: the shift of focus away from God (theology) towards the experiences and practices of religion (“philosophizing about religion”). It’s odd that Hegel so dislikes this change in emphasis, since he is responsible for the idea of a separate philosophy of religion (see his book titles). These days, when we make a philosophical study of God, we end up calling it philosophy of religion because that name has stuck. What to write about: clarify the distinction between religion and philosophical theology. - Phrase “post-Kantian modernity” needs to be unpacked. It means, ‘modern philosophy after Immanuel Kant’. So, you should explain why Kant is seen as such a major figure in philosophy, and what role he plays in Westphal’s essay. - Westphal talks about “philosophical theology … in our own time”. What does he mean by this? - We’ve studied lots of modern philosophers who talk about God – Swinburne, Hick, Plantinga, etc. What do we find in this ‘philosophical theology’ today? You could set out key ideas/arguments. Pre-Kantian philosophical theology 4.) There are two forms of philosophical theology in the background to what Hegel is writing: scholastic and deistic. Both are interested in what we can establish of God through reason. The scholastic view assumes that reason can work in harmony with faith (belief) and revelation (Bible). The deistic view, however, thinks that reason is completely separate from faith or revelation. Religion should be limited to reason and all the irrational bits eliminated. Rational deistic ideas for religion include an emphasis upon God as the source of moral law. Deists dismiss the supernatural or questionable historical stories about Jesus. [List of deist philosophers: not important] What to write about: “movement Hegel deplores” – clarify this: the shift of attention in philosophy away from God onto religion. - Key terms: scholastic, deistic. Scholastic: (Latin scholasticus – student, teacher, scholar). A school of Christian philosophy built around Medieval scholarship. Scholasticism emphasised the value of logic and the application of this to Christian doctrines. A key scholastic philosopher would be Aquinas. Deistic: (Latin deus – God). An approach to belief in God which emphasises the impersonal and unknowable nature of the divine qualities. Deists often argue that God exists, particularly as the source of the universe, but that we can know nothing further about him. - ‘Harmony of faith and reason’ – a scholastic ideal we’ve encountered on this course: Aquinas and the arguments for God, doctrine of analogy. Explain how many philosophers have believed that philosophy supports the Christian faith. - Deists like Kant have sought religion “within the limits of reason alone”. Clarify what Kant thought religion should be about (this emerges later in Westphal’s essay). Kantian ethics reflect the idea of a rational ethics-centred religion. 5.) Deism is the school of thought which was current immediately before Hegel came along. This period (esp. 18th century) was known as the ‘Enlightenment’ (= ‘age of reason’), the time at which new ideas in science and philosophy were developing. Major religious wars had happened in Europe (particularly between Catholics and Protestants) and Enlightenment thinkers wanted to leave that behind. While some rejected religion, others wanted to define a new type of religion to bring people together (“foster moral unity”). They wanted to make religion objective so that everyone could agree and live in peace. What to write about: Explain the key terms: ‘deism’ and ‘scholasticism’ (just see above). - Key term: Enlightenment. In the Medieval era, philosophers emphasised the authority of the Church and the Bible (bring in Aquinas here). In the Enlightenment, philosophers emphasised human reason instead, believing that religion and society should be reformed (bring in Kant). The Medieval Church (Aquinas) was happy to justify religious wars (think about Just War Theory), whereas Enlightenment philosophers were not (Kant). - “anti-religious materialism” = atheism. Some Enlightenment philosophers were atheists, some not. Perhaps contrast a key atheist with Kant. - “moral unity … among human societies” links to justice, law and punishment topic. Which philosophers have emphasised the importance of a united society? (Plato, Kant, Rawls). 6.) This agenda (focus on a new, moral religion) had consequences for knowledge (epistemology) and for the Church (ecclesiology). Non-violent religion would have to be universal (agreed by all) and so could not rely on a special revelation (God’s presence in the Bible, or religious experience). The new moral religion couldn’t be found in any one church or sect either. It is rationalism: based on reason. This rationalism did not emphasise pure logic (a priori reasoning) at the expense of sense perception (empiricism, a posteriori reason). Rationalists and empiricists agreed that religion should be limited to commonly available sources of knowledge: whether reason or experience. This contrasts with the faith emphasis upon special revelation or a particular church. What to write about: Rational faith could not be based on revelation. Contrast this with scholasticism and Aquinas: what would he say? Also contrast religious experience (a revelation): how is this different from what Kant and others propose? - Rational faith not tied to any specific Church: a good opportunity to explain what the key figures in this text think of the Church: Kant (it should just be a moral community), Schleiermacher (it should be a group united in contemplation of the Infinite), and Hegel (it should be the site for human selfconsciousness, leading to consciousness of God – Absolute Spirit). - Explain contrast between empirical and a priori reasoning (with examples?) - Rejection of revelation and the Church. Compare deistic views with atheism: how are these different and how are they the same? Critics of religion also reject revelation and Church … 7.) Deism comes from three main ideas: the focus on knowledge and reason, religious tolerance (not hating other faiths), and the rejection of the power and authority of the Church. These ideas pre-date the trend criticised by Hegel of denying knowledge of God and focusing on religion. Still, by asking what makes a good religion, deism already shifts the attention away from God and onto religion. It sees religion as a human, social reality. What to write about: Explain how deism focused on reason (esp. Kant). - Religious tolerance comes up a lot in this essay: Kant thought this was important because rational and ethical people would get along. There would not be ‘one true faith’. - Explain Hegel’s complaint that people were denying knowledge of God. What did he think would be better instead? - Deism sees religion as a human, social reality. Compare this with atheism. Marx and others also saw religion as a social reality. How is deism similar and different from atheism? 8.) Hume and Kant: they believed that their criticisms of the arguments for God had finished off the scholastic and deistic philosophy of their times. People thought that Kant had taken apart the arguments for God. That’s why Hegel complained of people no longer believing that we can know God. Philosophers became interested in what we can learn of religion in human life, instead of the concept of God. What to write about: Explain who the philosophers are: Hume and Kant and how they fit into Westphal’s essay. - Explain the ‘scholastic’ and ‘deist’ projects (see 4). - What are the arguments for God? What sort of criticisms did Hume and Kant come up with? - What ideas in the philosophy of religion after Kant, without the proofs for God? (See the last sentence). You might consider Kant and Schleiermacher. 9.) Hume and Kant both thought that the arguments for God did not work, but their philosophy led in different directions. What to write about: Hume and Kant again. Who are they? - Again, rejection of arguments for God (see above). - Different directions for their work. Hume was a sceptic, rejecting theism. Kant meanwhile wanted religion within the limits of reason. Contrast the ideas of these two. Post-Kantian reconstructions of the deist project 10.) Kant is the deist who undermined the arguments for God (“metaphysical foundations”), but then sought to give deism a new basis. In this new (“post-Kantian”) era of philosophy, he brought a new approach to religion. What to write about: Kant had undermined the metaphysical basis for God: the arguments. What are these arguments and how were they criticised? - What is deism? - What did Kant do to bring about this new approach? (“rescuing the deist project”). 11.) Kant’s new approach to deism had two distinctive features. First, he claimed that we have no theoretical knowledge of God, but we can get a practical understanding. He thought that we should believe in God because of morality, not logic. Second, Kant thought that humans could be deliberately, radically evil. They could freely chose evil (an idea which connects with Original Sin – St. Augustine’s view that humans have innate evil because of the rebellion against God in Eden). What to write about: No a priori knowledge of God? Contrast ontological argument. - Contrast Kant’s views with Hegel, who thought our reason could make us aware of God. - Morality is the basis for our understanding of God? Contrast critics of religious morality. - Is there ‘radical evil’ in humanity? Compare the problem of evil, Augustine. 12.) Kant also talks about the type of religion which would be acceptable in the Enlightenment (=”Age of Reason”). Religion should involve rationality leading us to morality. There are three principles for the relationship between religion and morality: (a) morality doesn’t need religion, (b) but morality leads to religion, and finally (c) religion recognises duties as God’s commands. So, religion is useful to morality. What to write about: Kant – always explain who he is. Also explain “Age of Reason”. - Reason serving morality: what did Kant think about ethics? Why did Kant think that reason was important in morality? How could this be contrasted with other approaches to morality? - Morality does not need religion: contrast this with purely biblical ethics, or Natural Moral Law. - Morality leads to religion: explain Kant’s approach. Why might God be useful in ethics? - Divine commands: examples, compare biblical ethics, etc. Think of the Euthyphro dilemma: here we say that God wills things because they are good. Goodness is higher than God? 13.) If religion is universal, rational and moral, then there’s no need for special duties to God (ritual, priesthood). All the outward expressions of religion are just illusions, only useful if they encourage moral behaviour. God only seems to be useful as an idea which helps us to be more moral. What to write about: Explain Kant’s emphasis on universal, rational religion: why did he think this important? - Contrast Kant’s take on religion with established ideas. How might Medieval Church philosophers (e.g. Aquinas, Anselm) disagree? Who would support the established Church? Why do you think philosophy is suggesting something so radical here? - Link religion and morality topic. Kant brings the two together, but in an unusual way. - Religion only useful for promoting ethics? Contrast that with Natural Moral Law and Aquinas: the goal of ethics is union with God. 14.) Kant continues to try to reform Christianity and make it rational, drawing out the consequences for Christ and the Church. The Church is no more than a moral community. Kant’s (‘Augustinian’) focus on human sinfulness thus gives way to the positive/optimistic (‘Pelagian’) view that humans can choose to be perfectly good. Christ, then, is only useful as an example of moral perfection. Any view we have on Christ has to be based on reason, not claims about history (which can be challenged or criticised). What to write about: Always give time in your essay to explain who Kant is, and his agenda. - Religion based on reason alone. Contrast this idea with atheist critics of religion, who claim that it is always irrational / non-rational (Dawkins, Freud, etc.). - Distinguish Augustinian from Pelagian ideas. Bring in Problem of Evil: how would this fit with what Kant is saying? - Christ is just a good example of moral perfection? Why might Christians disagree with this? Which groups would oppose this idea, and what would there arguments be? - Compare / contrast Kant’s view of Christ with that of Hegel (see later on). 15.) Kant’s views fit with the philosopher Lessing, who thought that knowledge of God should not depend on historical evidence: questionable or changeable. Kant and Lessing did not want to get rid of Christianity altogether, but wanted to reinterpret the main ideas to make it reasonable and free from mythology. What to write about: Knowledge of God should not depend on historical evidence or accounts: contrast this with the argument from religious experience, which assumes that a body of testimony can tell us about God. - Expand on what some would see as historical evidence for faith: Scripture, Church, etc. - Again, who might disagree with this idea of reinterpreting Christianity? - Kant has something in common with Hegel here: compare views on myth-free religion. 16.) Unlike Kant, Schleiermacher and Hegel were not deists, although they shared his desire to change our approach to God. Schleiermacher addressed an audience which was not interested in complex and speculative arguments about God, or in Kant’s hardline moralistic approach. God’s direct control and care for the world (providence) and immortality Schleiermacher dismissed as ‘external’ to real religion. The essence of religion is in feeling, a conscious awareness of the unity of all things. What to write about: Who were Schleiermacher and Hegel? How do they differ from Kant? - Explain scholasticism and deism. How do they contrast with Schleiermacher’s perspective? - Schleiermacher’s audience didn’t find Kant’s rigorous morals very appealing – what was it that Kant suggested about ethics? Why might that have been off-putting? - Schleiermacher linked religion with feeling. This may be compared with religious experience; personal perception may be an important source of religious knowledge. Examples? 17.) Schleiermacher was a supporter of the philosopher Spinoza, suggesting pantheism (the view that God is everything) as opposed to the view that God is a distinct and personal being. Religion is a feeling of unity; everything lives in and through God. The idea that God is separate and personal is “vain mythology”. What to write about: Explain: who were Schleiermacher and Spinoza? What is pantheism? - Contrast pantheism with more typical theistic beliefs? What are the traditional ideas about God, and which philosophers would support them? How radical is Schleiermacher’s suggestion? - Again, link feeling with religious experience. Compare / contrast Schleiermacher with Hegel. 18.) Schleiermacher’s ‘church’ would be a united group (=communion) who recognise the feeling of unity as true religion. This doesn’t mean rejecting churches which already have their own beliefs about God or practices, but the Church is just an association of those who are seeking true religion. We should “discover religion in religions” – we can learn from faiths as we know them today. What to write about: Explain who Schleiermacher was and his ideas. - Schleiermacher reinterprets what the real ‘Church’ is all about. Compare this with Kant, who saw the real Church as a moral community. - How might some believers react to Schleiermacher’s claim that the religions of the world only offer a pathway to true religion? - If God is everything (Pantheism), we might not need a Church at all. Compare this with atheism; are communities of believers of any real use? 19.) Schleiermacher gave this advice about religions, because he thought that real religion would be clothed in particular ideas and practices. Religious feeling needs to be communicated in some concrete image or idea, even if temporary or limited. We need a concrete way of looking at religion, to help make sense of it. Yet, we don’t need particular ideas or practices to be holy / pious. We can be religious without following one specific code. What to write about: Again: background on Schleiermacher. - What ‘ideas and practices’ surround religion as we know it? Give examples. What ideas about God have we studied on this course? How do these compare with Schleiermacher? - Compare Paul Tillich on symbols, who claimed that these religions images ‘point beyond themselves’ to something higher or true. - Religion doesn’t have to follow one specific faith or code: compare with Kant’s view that religion can be rational and universal. 20.) Hegel is unconvinced by Kant (religion=morality) and Schleiermacher (religion=feeling), because he is interested in conceptual knowledge of God. Although Hegel sympathises with Schleiermacher, he thinks he is confused. Romanticism (emphasising feeling) can be empty of content and so may be compatible with anything (anything goes, relativism). Who’s to say which feelings are real and which feelings matter? Alternatively, Romanticism puts forward content that needs to be explained and defended. Saying that we just have an immediate experience is dogmatism, blind unquestioning faith. Schleiermacher’s ideas about the Infinite and Eternal are concepts, not just feelings, just as with traditional Christian ideas (Trinity, etc.). What to write about: Explain the key figures Hegel, Kant, Schleiermacher. Why do you think Hegel is more sympathetic to Schleiermacher? Both are admirers of Spinoza … - Explain how reliance on feelings could lead to ‘absurd beliefs’ and ‘immoral practices’. - Why should we explain the content of ‘feeling’ or experience? This brings up a much wider question: is religion rational, and should it be rational? 21.) Hegel sets himself two tasks: firstly defending metaphysics (the study of reality beyond our everyday perceptions, especially of God) after Kant’s criticisms of the theistic arguments, and secondly developing metaphysics which is significant for religion. [Ignore list of his works]. His key idea is that religion and philosophy have the same content or focus, but they work in different ways and take different forms. Religion is linked to images and narratives (rituals, art, Bible). Philosophy is better because it is conceptual and so can give real knowledge. Older forms of philosophical theology were too caught up in images and narratives (“finite subject matter”). Hegel wants a purely conceptual approach, reinterpreting Idea and Spirit. This would firstly justify philosophical speculation and secondly give us a solid basis for philosophical theology. What to write about: Who is Hegel? Why did he value metaphysics? - Explain the contrast between Hegel’s position and that of Kant. - Westphal talks about “the aftermath of Kant”. What does that mean? What had Kant said about the arguments for God? - Give examples of the “sensory images and historical narratives” which limit religion according to Hegel. Who would disagree with this idea? How radical is what Hegel suggests? - Compare Hegel’s reinterpretation of religion with the religions of Kant and Schleiermacher. 22.) Hegel’s focus on Ideas is quite close to Aristotle and Plotinus (who both emphasised the ultimate power of thought/contemplation), rather than Berkeley and Kant (who were more sceptical of the reality of Ideas, independent of the mind). But Hegel’s views are perhaps closest to Spinoza’s (Pantheism). Hegel contrasts with Lessing, whose support for Spinoza led him to reject traditional Christian ideas. Hegel instead prefers a radical reinterpretation, freeing Christianity from mythology. Unlike Schleiermacher, Hegel gives a specific philosophical argument to defend his support for Spinoza. What to write about: Who is Hegel? Why would someone think that Ideas are the most real or important things? Explain comparison with Aristotle and Plotinus. - Explain Spinoza. How are Hegel’s views similar to those of Spinoza? Why is that controversial? - Why might Spinoza’s philosophy lead to a rejection of traditional Christianity (Lessing)? - Explain how classic Christian philosophy (e.g. Aquinas, Anselm) contrast with Pantheism, offering a distinct and personal view of God. - ‘Demythologizing’ Christianity: which mythological aspects of Christianity might a philosopher which to eliminate? 23.) Hegel’s views aren’t quite like Spinoza’s, however, although he doesn’t see God as a personal being distinct from the world (= traditional theism). Our basic understanding sees God (= Infinite Spirit) and the world (= finite spirit) as separate, but reason can perceive their unity (“no longer two”). Hegel could defend himself against the charge of Pantheism only by saying that the Spirit in all things is most real, rather than matter / substance. What to write about: Explain key figures: Hegel and Spinoza. What’s the background to Hegel’s philosophy, and why does it lead him to Spinoza? - Contrast Hegel’s attitude with traditional theism: what are the more traditional ideas about God? Who would support traditional views? - Compare / contrast Hegel’s support for Spinoza with that of Schleiermacher. - How does Hegel contribute to the theism debate: can we have real knowledge of God in accordance with his theory? 24.) Religion lifts up limited, human, worldly ‘finite spirit’ to the level of ‘Infinite Spirit’. In religion, this is often misunderstood as a personal encounter with someone. In philosophy, this is the recognition that God is the product and object of human selfawareness. God is present in humans becoming aware of Absolute Spirit. This awareness of the Idea is the only true reality. What to write about: Explain what Hegel’s view of religion is, in your own words. - Compare Hegel’s view of religion with other key reformers: Kant and Schleiermacher. - “Encounter with someone other”: this is religious experience. Explain what rel. exp. Is and how it contrasts with Hegel’s conceptual approach to religion. Could bring in Donovan … - God is found in human self-awareness. Contrast this with traditional theism. Some would see Hegel’s view as coming close to atheism: why? Compare with atheists like Marx, who regard religion as a product of the human mind. 25.) The idea of lifting up the human spirit is found in all religions, but is best in Christianity. However, Hegel thinks that Christianity can only achieve this when put in philosophical form, reinterpreting key themes. It is revealed religion, not because of Jesus or the Bible, but because philosophically reason makes God fully manifest (known/obvious). Incarnation – the doctrine that Jesus took on human flesh – is the central Christian truth. This is because Jesus represents the idea that human awareness is itself divine. What to write about: Explain Hegel and the link between awareness and God (see above). - What might it mean to reinterpret Christianity? Compare Hegel’s approach with the other key figures from Westphal. - Reason makes God manifest – for Hegel this is just a part of consciousness. However, other theists have claimed that reason proves God through arguments – explain and compare. - Why is Incarnation an important idea in Christianity? Why might Hegel’s approach be controversial? Hume and the Hermeneutics of Suspicion ‘Hermeneutic of suspicion’ = a method of enquiry which refuses to take someone at his or her word; a suspicious reading of the evidence. 26.)Modern philosophy of religion developed among those who were did not accept traditional Christianity (i.e. rejecting authority of Church, Scripture, dogma). Yet, Hume’s approach was very different from Kant. Instead of trying to reform religion & make it relevant to the modern world, Hume thought that religion itself was inherently flawed. What to write about: ‘Philosophy of religion’ – remember that this is different from philosophical theology (see the opening section); explain how / why. - Unpack what Westphal means by ‘historic Christianity’; give examples. - Explain who the key figures are: Hume and Kant. - Explain Kant’s approach to religion (rational, moral) and distinguish this from Hume. 27.) We are suspicious when we ask what motives might lie behind religious beliefs; perhaps the religious have a hidden agenda. Hume suggests that being holy or pious might just be a way of flattering and pleasing the gods, to get something out of it (selfish hope / fear). This piety leads to self-deception; believers don’t recognise that their hope for reward in heaven is selfish; the sacred is just a means to an end. What to write about: explain who Hume is and his wider approach to religion. - What practical benefits do religious believers take from their faith? How might this explain the existence religion? - What are the ‘hopes and fears’ which religion addresses? - Link with religion and morality topic: according to Dawkins religious morality is just “sucking up”, a way of seeking personal benefit. What other explanations for faith and religious ethics are there? Kant’s view of duty as a ‘divine command’ arguably is not focused on ‘selfish hope’. - Other atheists have linked religion to self-interest (see Marx and Nietzsche below); Freud thought that faith brought psychological satisfaction in the form of a father figure (God). 28.) Marx and Nietzsche also see religion in terms of self-deception. Marx is interested in how religion affects society (=sociology) rather than the individual (=psychology). Marx thinks that religion is an ideology with a function: propping up an unfair society, or social domination. When people are exploited, religion gives the impression that this set up is a natural order, given by God. This encourages the victims of exploitation to cooperate with the rich and powerful. Religion gets the poor and exploited to accept the privilege of others, because the thought of going to heaven is comforting. What to write about: brief explanation of who these figures are: Marx and Nietzsche. More detail information on Marx could be helpful. - Possibly distinguish Marx’s approach from psychological critiques (like Freud). - In what ways has religion traditionally influenced society? Examples would clarify Marx here. - Explain how religion could be used to exploit. Also consider whether religion can challenge social privilege (how does Jesus’ condemnation of wealth fit in?). - Contrast Marx’s approach with Hume’s – are believers really being selfish? 29.) For Nietzsche, religion is based on the slave revolt in morals. However, since he thought that all would strive for power, Nietzsche thought that the weak (religious believers) would want to get revenge instead of just being consoled. Linking up with the priests, poor people would express their frustration through religion. This gives them the satisfaction of feeling superior to the rich and strong, and makes the strong feel guilty. God exists to punish enemies (the strong). What to write about: Explain who Nietzsche is. - Explain ‘slave revolt in morals’. Give examples of how biblical teaching supports to poor. - Contrast Nietzsche’s views with other critics of religion: Hume and Marx. - How might religion make rich people feel guilty? - Is religion all about condemning the rich and powerful? How else might we explain religion? That is, Nietzsche believed that morality had once been dictated by the strong and brave (as with the heroes of ancient Greece). However, with Christianity, Nietzsche believed that the weak had taken over, using religion to criticise the rich and powerful whilst praising the poor and meek. Nietzsche thought this ‘slave revolt’ was a disaster, and hoped that the powerful (‘supermen’) could once again take control of ethics. 30.) It’s not just the non-religious who have been suspicious of traditional religion. The Christian philosopher Kierkegaard attacked Christian society. Smug middle class Christians think that the current society is perfect and ordered by God (=kingdom of heaven). That confuses imperfect and limited human society with the ultimate. It suggests that we just have to be good citizens, but that contrasts with Jesus, who most often criticised the establishment. What to write about: Explain the secular criticism of religion (Hume, Marx, Nietzsche). This shares a critique of Christian society with Kierkegaard, but ends up with very different outcomes. - How could some Christians suppose that present society is like the kingdom of God? - What’s wrong with associating God with middle class respectability? - Which aspects of Jesus’ life contrast with ‘the established order’? Some Implications from Westphal (1) If philosophy shifts its focus away from God and onto the human practice of religion the implications would be … There might be less support for the existence of God, with less people willing to talk about God as a philosophical idea. The arguments for God would be ignored. The human experience of God might seem less credible; philosophical supporters of God (like Richard Swinburne) would not be there to back up those who believe that they have encountered God. The controversial debate regarding the existence of God would not be as important; thinkers would be more focused on the role of religion in society. Believers might be more humanistic: focused on practices and values rather than metaphysical beliefs. That might be a good thing (?). EVALUATE: Are any of the above good outcomes? (2) If we emphasise reason as the only basis for religion, the implications would be … Traditional aspects of faith not grounded in logic might suffer, or be scrapped altogether (ritual, narratives/Bible, religious art, worship etc.). Religion everywhere would have to be the same. Cultural differences between religions are not based on reason. Truths known through reason would be the same in Europe, the Middle East, or East Asia. Tensions between faiths might disappear. Religion might not seem to be a distinct part of life, since being religious would mean no more than being reasonable or rational. Human experience would have to be dominated by rational judgements, since these are the most important things. Irrational emotion is not the highest value. Humans might become more sympathetic and understanding, since they try to base their faith and values on considered judgements. EVALUATE: Are any of the above good outcomes? (3) If (with Kant) we agree that religion is no more than a system of morality, the implications would be … Aspects of faith not concerned with ethics would be marginalised or disappear (again: ritual, narratives/Bible, religious art, worship etc.). The emotional content of religion (love, gratitude) would be replaced by a focus on moral duty. Religion everywhere would be the same, since rational ethics should be universal. Churches, mosques and synagogues would change into moral support groups; all their other curious activities would be irrelevant. Human experience would always have to focus on ethics: being moral is the highest good and the only basis for religion. We would always have to be conscious of duty. Human society might become more just and moral, since consideration of the moral law would replace self interest and hedonism. EVALUATE: Are any of the above good outcomes? (4) If (with Schleiermacher) we agree that religion should be focused on ‘feeling’, the implications would be … Religion would become very personal, as individual sensations and experiences would be the source of ‘truth’, rather than cold logic or Church authority. External forms of faith (ritual, Church, Bible) would be less important that what the individual feels. Religion would be much more flexible. ‘Feeling’ is quite open in terms of what it means: there isn’t really any strict guidance in terms of what religion should be like. People could choose their own values and practices if they ‘felt’ right. Human experience on a personal level would take priority; people would be less interested in what authorities had to say, whether priests or philosophy professors. Reason and logical argument might be marginalised as being less important than individual and personal awareness. EVALUATE: Are any of the above good outcomes? (5) If (with Hegel) we agree that religion should be focused on conceptual knowledge of God (as Infinite Spirit), the implications would be … Religion would feel more academic or intellectual. Philosophy would be the most important support for religion. Traditional religious practices (ritual, worship, Bible, etc.) would be less important than the concepts people study. Faith might become a bit elitist – the best philosophers would have the best understanding of God, and so would be the most religious. Human experience would have to be dominated by philosophical study, since this would be the only way to access the ultimate – God. Emotional and non-rational parts of human life might be seen as trivial. EVALUATE: Are any of the above good outcomes? (6) If (with Hume, Marx, Nietzsche) we agree that religion is practised only because it brings people advantages, the implications would be … Religion would have to be scrapped; it’s just a big fat institutionalised lie. The existence of God would not be seen as an important matter. The arguments for God would be seen as attempts to justify people’s selfish behaviour. Religion would lose all moral authority, since it is based on selfinterest. People would have to look elsewhere for moral guidance. Human life and experience would have to turn away from faith as a source of structure; meaning would have to come from other sources. Religious experiences would be understood as anomalies or psychological events. This part of human experience cannot match up with what Hume et al. are saying. Critique of Pure Reason In this work, Kant wants to know what the limits of ‘pure reason’ are; in other words, what are the limits of a priori reasoning? Kant does not think that God’s existence can be known through pure reason, or through any metaphysical argument. Kant dismisses the cosmological argument, the design argument and the ontological argument. Kant now needs to rescue the deist project (Westphal refers to deism as being the ‘new religion of the Enlightenment’: a ‘religion’ based on principles of reason, without the ‘husk’ of the traditional religions. Critique of Practical Reason This is Kant’s ethical work, in which he discusses the categorical and hypothetical imperatives. Even morality—the way we should act—is determined by reason. We are moral creatures precisely because we are rational creatures. We don’t need religion to be moral; Kant uses morality as his way to bring back Godattained-by-reason, since he had, in Westphal’s words, ‘demolished’ arguments for the existence of God in the Critique of Pure Reason. Kant’s Pelagianism Pelagius was a 4th century theologian who denied the existence of original sin. Pelagius taught that human beings could choose good or evil by the strength of their own wills—no special graces are necessary. Pelagius’ teachings were condemned by the Church as heresy (Council of Carthage). Kant’s views are similar to those of Pelagius, hence Westphal refers to Kant’s ‘Pelagianism’. Kant also believed that Christ was nothing more than a good role model, since his claims to divinity could not be established by reason. RATIONAL CONSIDERATION OF THE OBJECTIVE NATURE OF MORALITY SUGGESTS THAT GOD EXISTS – KANT 1 Kant believed God’s existence could only be established through faith as opposed to logic. Kant reasoned in a perfect world, behaving morally should lead to happiness, since happiness should be the natural reward for virtue. However, in this world, this reward rarely happens, so Kant considered there must be another answer. RATIONAL CONSIDERATION OF THE OBJECTIVE NATURE OF MORALITY SUGGESTS THAT GOD EXISTS – KANT 2 Something must motivate people apart from immediate happiness. Kant believed people must feel an objective sense of obligation which compels then to behave in a certain way, regardless of consequences. Kant argued there were rationally discoverable laws which we are duty bound to follow. Kant calls these laws CATEGORICAL IMPERATIVES RATIONAL CONSIDERATION OF THE OBJECTIVE NATURE OF MORALITY SUGGESTS THAT GOD EXISTS – KANT 3 Kant then considered any possible further implications that could be drawn from his discovery that morality is a matter of applying rational thought to discover categorical imperatives. What else had he to accept as true? Kant argued there were 3 assumptions which he called Postulates of morality: FREEDOM – IMMORTALITY - GOD HIGHEST GOOD – SUMMUM BONUM Kant has a 3 stage argument to explain the summum bonum. 1/ Morality demands us to aim for the highest good 2/ We cannot attain this unless there is a God to assist us. 3/ God must exist to ensure that we can achieve that which we are duty bound to do. Kant’s three Postulates of morality FREEDOM – If we feel obliged to fulfil a certain duty we must have the freedom to fulfil it IMMORTALITY – This follows on from Kant’s 3rd argument – If we are unable to attain this goal in our present life there must be an afterlife in which we can attain it. GOD – following on from the above – there must be someone who can ensure that we do attain it in a future life. Only God has the necessary power. God is both the ground of the moral law and that which can enable us to achieve its goals. Therefore it is morally necessary to assume God. CRITICISMS OF THE MORAL ARGUMENT – 1 Morality stems from the demands placed upon the human animal by living in societies. Rules meet the needs of a particular situation and facilitate human development in that particular context. This view explains morality without reference to God. It also suggests that moral laws can change as and when necessary. CRITICISMS OF THE MORAL ARGUMENT 2 The moral argument may strengthen the faith of existing believers. Newman.s argument appeals to those who worship the God of the bible. Those arguments based on objective laws might appeal who already accept such unconditional ‘a priori’ laws. CRITICISMS OF THE MORAL ARGUMENT – 3 Problems arise for those who do not accept God’s existence; or that of objective laws. The moral argument is unlikely to inspire belief for them. 1/ Morality can be explained without the need for God. Clashes of opinions amongst believers on issues such as war and abortion support this view. 2/ The concept of objective law has been challenged 3/ Even if accepted, God may still not be necessary 4/ Proof of the existence of God is beyond the scope of the moral argument – the best we can say is it points to a law-maker. CONCLUSION The moral argument cannot be used to provide proof for the existence of God. It can only reinforce the beliefs of an existing believer. The unbeliever would not be swayed by these arguments because the moral argument is based on a logical error: While the existence of a moral God would indeed suggest the existence of moral laws, the existence of moral laws cannot point us back to God. Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768-1834) Schleiermacher was a German Romantic Philosopher and theologian. The Romantic period (roughly from 1750-1830) was a literary, artistic and intellectual movement against the Enlightenment. The Romantic poets Like Kant, Schleiermacher rejected the notion of dogma (religious teaching held on authority). Unlike Kant, Schleiermacher did not dismiss human emotion or feeling into the realm of the ‘husk’; rather, he felt that feeling (in German, Gefuhl) was the only way to truly know and experience God. Paul Tillich feels that Schleiermacher has made a grave mistake in basing his philosophy and theology on the idea of Gefuhl. “But now Schleiermacher made a great mistake. The term he used for the experience of this identity [between a person and God] was ‘feeling’…. A better term would have been ‘intuition’.” [Paul Tillich, A History of Christian Thought, 1972] Intuition is the immediate understanding of something without the need for induction or deduction. Plato had taught that intuition is the highest form of knowledge, since it put us directly in touch with the archetypal Forms. Schleiermacher did consider the word intuition but persisted, despite his critics, with the notion of Gefuhl. Implications of Schleiermacher Schleiermacher wrote a book addressed called On Religion: Speeches to its Cultured Despisers (1799) and was addressed to educated disciples of Enlightenment circles who had rejected organised religion. He wanted to appeal to their appreciation of the Romantic movement, arguing that religion was about feeling and a sense of dependency. Schleiermacher is considered the first of a new era of liberal theologians; many think that he is still a model for us today as to how we should rethink traditional doctrines in a new light, accessible to modern thinkers. He is also important for reminding us that the human person is essentially one in relationship with another; in our technological age, we often forget the important of emotional attachments, family, friends and love. Look at what Fr. Raniero Cantelmessa says about the implications of Schleiermacher’s philosophy for human relationships and marriage: “I've found the most convincing explanation for this divine "invention" of the difference between the sexes not from a biblical scholar, but from a poet, Paul Claudel: "Man is a proud being; there was no other way to make him understand his neighbor except introducing him in the flesh. There was no other way to make him understand dependence and need other than through the law of another distinct being (woman) over him, due to the simple fact that she exists."[1] Opening oneself to the opposite sex is the first step toward opening oneself to others, our neighbors, and to the Other with a capital O, which is God. Marriage is born under the sign of humility; it is the recognition of dependence and therefore of one's condition of being a creature. Falling in love with a woman or a man is the completion of the most radical act of humility. It is becoming a beggar and telling the other person, "I'm not enough for myself, I need your being." If, as Schleiermacher said, the essence of religion is the "sense of dependence" ("Abhaengigheitsgefuehl") on God, then human sexuality is the first school of religion.” [Cantelmessa, ‘Values According to the Bible’, Zenit News, 2009] Georg Hegel (1770-1831) Philosophical theology is about God. This was more closely associate with metaphysics (about unseen things); the emphasis was on the existence of God and on the nature of being. Philosophy of religion is about religion. This was more closely associated with morality (about human acts); the emphasis was on personal experience and human knowledge. In the Enlightenment project, ‘philosophical theology’ lost ground; philosophy of religion became more prominent: questions about the value of religion, rather than questions about the existence of God. Hegel wanted to rescue philosophical theology. Hegel felt that religion and philosophy both had the same object: to know God. But religion, he felt, had become monumental and overbearing. Philosophy had to return to the true mode of religious expression found through freedom of the mind. Hegel was not satisfied with Kant’s reduction of religion to morality. Neither was he satisfied with Schleiermacher’s romanticism, or his reduction of religion to feelings (Gefuhl). God can be known; his existence can be known, thought Hegel. In order to show this, he had to rescue metaphysics and the idea that God can be known through reason. Hegel was aware that existence is full of tension: good and bad, positive and negative, war and peace, knowledge and confusion, Romanticism and Enlightenment thinking, and so on. Hegel wanted to synthesise all these conflicting ideas to produce true knowledge, the “Absolute Idea.” This process is known as ‘Hegelian dialectic’. Implications of Hegel In his book, Elements of the Philosophy of Right (1820), Hegel writes, “Supposedly the chief design and accomplishment of the Christian religion is to better man morally and make him more pleasing to God." But added to this basic definition he adds the problem of which has "burgeoned into the most shocking profusion of repressive institutions and ways of deluding mankind: oral confession, excommunication, penance, and a whole array of disgraceful monuments to human self-abasement.” What reason finds valuable in religion is “the great principle that duty and virtue are self-sufficient"; but this becomes clouded when anything more "than the merest association with the idea of God" is invoked. "Religion's proper task is to strengthen, by means of the idea of God as moral lawgiver, what impels us to act ethically and to enhance the satisfaction we derive from performing what our practical reason demands, specifically with regard to the ultimate end that reason posits: the highest good." Hegel also adds that belief in "the historical person of Christ" is a matter of empirical testimony rather than "any requirement of practical reason." He says sarcastically that taking such matters on faith "is far easier than cultivating the habit of thinking for ourselves." He describes belief in Jesus as "faith in a personified ideal." This is typical of Enlightenment thought, against which Hegel had yet to rebel. Hegel argues that tension also exists between the family and state. The family and its individuals should be integrated with civil society (the economic level). Civil society is part of the state (political level) and the state “has supreme right against the individual, whose supreme duty is to be a member of the state.” [Hegel, Philosophy of Right, 1820] Lenin, Marx and Engels all relied on what is known as ‘Hegelian dialectic’ in developing the communist ideal. Hegelian dialectic moves through thesis and antithesis to produce a synthesis. Hegel uses the example of good and evil; good is a thesis; evil is an antithesis; together (synthesis) we come to understand the meaning of ‘good.’ Marx used this idea; he proposed one system of government in opposition to another, leading to the overthrow of the first, and providing the synthesis—a new state. Lenin saw this dialectic as being used to induce a world-wide class struggle; the thesis of one class (poor), pitted against another (antithesis) to produce a synthesis (equality for all). While there was room in Hegel’s dialectic for God, communist philosophy rejected God. Hegelian dialectic became known as the materialist dialectic. Hegel’s dialectic is still very much in evidence in politics and economics today. Some commentators have argued that the War on Terror, US hegemony, global economic policies, have roots in Hegelian dialectics. Like Kant and Schleiermacher, Hegel rejects organised religion. He insists instead on human freedom and argues that human history is the story of making the transition from bondage to freedom. True freedom needs to be achieved when Hegelian dialectic is employed to reconcile the freedom of the individual with the freedom of the state—thus providing the ideal synthesis.