Zusammenfassung der Ressource
A2 Philosophy - Key Words
- Ontological Argument
- Atheist
- Someone who denies the existence of God or gods.
- Necessary
- Something that has an existence that cannot cease.
- Ex. - God.
- Contingent
- Something that has an existence that can cease to be.
- Ex. - Human Being.
- Syllogism
- A form of deductive reasoning where the argument
moves from the general ro the specific to reach a
conclusion.
- Possible Worlds
- A complete way things could be. It is not another physical world.
- Infinite
- Boundless or endless.
- Predicate
- Makes an assertation about a subject, telling you what something is/does/has.
- Faith
- A belief in somebody or something, an attitude of trust, assent to unproved assertations, a religion.
- Descartes
- Anselm
- Kant
- Hume
- Russell
- Plantinga
- Davies
- Malcolm
- Frege
- Liebniz
- General
- Reason
- The use of logic to come to a conclusion.
- Proposition
- A statement, assertation or theory that is seeking
to prove the argument under discussion.
- Premise
- A statement presumed true wuthin the context of the
argument for the purposes of arguing to a conclusion.
- A priori
- An argument that uses logic to prove an initital definition to be
correct. The statement is examined to prove it true or false.
(Doesn't depend on empirical evidence).
- Logically Necessary
- A statement that consists of a set of premises
and a conclusion that cannot be disputed.
- Tautologies
- Statements that are necessarily true, either because
they are logical or mathematical in nature, or because
they are truisms and true by definition.
- A posteriori arguments - based on experiences rather
than logic. Ex. - a circle is round/the sky is blue.
- Reductio ad absurdum
- Latin for "reduction to absurdity". In philosophy, the aim is to disprove an argument by
showing that the consequences of the propositionare absurd, or that the conclusion
reached is the opposite of the aim of proof.
- Problem of Evil
- Evil
- Moral Evil
- Natural Evil
- Problem of...
- Inconsistent
Triad
- Theodicy
- Augustine
- Privation
- Original Sin
- Hick
- Epistemic Distance
- Free Will Defence
- Free Will
- Possible Worlds
- Process Theory
- Body, Soul and P.I.
- Immortality
- A being or soul is not subject to death and cannot die.
- Soul
- The "essence" of a person.
- Materialism
- The theory that our body and mind are inseperable.
- Dualism
- The theory that there exist both minds and bodies, both distinct but linked together in some way.
- "The body cannot live without the mind." [Morpheus - The Matrix 1999]
- Conciousness
- Our awareness of ourselves and the world.
- Meme
- The idea that we pass culture onto future generations, alongside genes (DNA).
- Psyche
- Another word for the soul.
- Nous
- The thinking part of the mind.
- Resurrection
- The belief that an individual will be brought back from the dead by an external power believed to be God.
- Jesus/Lazarus
- Replica Theory
- Hick's theory that a direct copy of a person is made on another world at the moment of death.
- Reincarnation
- The transfer of a soul or spirit from one body at death to another at birth.
- Rebirth
- A continuing process of change from one life to the next.
- Karma
- The moral law of cause and effect. Can affect future lives.
- Augustine
- Descartes
- Swinburne
- Plato
- Gilbert Ryle
- Dawkins
- Aristotle
- Plato
- Aquinas
- Hick
- Bhargavard Gita
- New clothes quote (2.22)