Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Teleological Argument
- The 'design argument'
- Created by Thomas Aquinas and
developed by William Paley
- An a posteriori argument
- from evidence
- Inspiration from Aristotle
- Aquinas's argument
- Everything in the natural world
follows natural laws, even
non-thinking things; eg, rivers flow,
trees grow
- These things seem to have a purpose/direction and
to do well (eg to become a mature tree)
- A non-thinking thing cannot have direction
unless given it by someone - eg an arrow is
directed by an archer
- So the natural
world is given
direction by God
- This idea is based on the
idea of regularity of
succession (the idea that
a thing happening leads
to something else.)
- Criticisms of Aquinas's argument
- Anthony Flew:
Rivers and
trees do not
have purpose
- Why can't the natural world
just be the way it is? Why does
it need to have a designer giving
it direction?
- Swinburne:
Why should
God impose
laws?
- What reason does he
have to do this?
- How do we know it's God?
- William Paley's argument
- If you find a rock, you
conclude it's just a rock. If
you find a watch, you can
see evidence it has been
designed
- It has a purpose
- Its different parts are
fit for this purpose
- If the parts are out of order, the
watch will not work
- So it must have had a maker
- A watch (like the world) can go
wrong, but that's not the issue: the
issue is that the evidence shows it
was designed correctly
- The natural world is far
more complex than a watch
- For example, the human eye was
designed for a purpose.
- Paley looks at how things fit
together for a purpose rather than
at natural laws.
- It must have had a designer
- Crticisims of Paley's argument
- This god is a designer, but not a loving Christian God
- Machines and nature
are incompatible; even
similar things in
nature cannot be
compared (eg the
nervous system of an
animal would not work
in a human body)
- David Hume: Why
couldn't the world
have more than one
designer?
- The world has issues - so
was God stupid, or an infant?
- Note that Paley
thought this was
irrelevant - Paley
wrote about his
argument AFTER
Hume made his
criticisms of similar
arguments
- For him, not
knowing how
something is
made
increases awe
for the maker
- We have no other
universes to compare
the universe to, so
analogies are
insufficient
- Swinburne
countered
this: Just
because the
universe is
singular
doesn't mean
we shouldn't
try to work it
out
- Other explanations
for order in the
universe
- Matter
could simply
naturally
lean towards
order
- Paley
countered:
a watch
doesn't
come out
of chance
- Trial and error
- Swinburne: Time is regular,
and things don't seem to
come out of chaos
- Evolution/natural selection
- John Stuart Mill questions
that there is good in nature.
Dawkins uses the digger
wasp example
- Can 'cruelty' be a word applied to nature?
- Paley and Aquinas
weren't interested in
the quality of design