Teleological Argument: OCR Religious Studies

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 31 ม.ค. 2025

ความคิดเห็น • 39

  • @SenorDep
    @SenorDep 2 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    Got my philosophy exam tomorrow, watching your videos for any last ideas and they're helping so much - thank you!

  • @nuvairausman430
    @nuvairausman430 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I watch your videos for criminology and I've been getting higher marks, all thanks to you now I found your religious studies videos aswell and I'm pleased

    • @IThinkThereforeITeach
      @IThinkThereforeITeach  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      That is wonderful to hear! I am really pleased my videos are helping and well done on your higher marks 😀

  • @chloew968
    @chloew968 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    There is a lot to this topic - I feel like it could quite easily become quite a descriptive essay trying to cover all the points (it would also be quite hard to remember all the points!). Is it important to cover all aspects of it, or can you just cover what's directly related to the question? E.G. if the question was on Aquinas' fifth way would you necessarily need to bring in evolution? Thanks - your videos are very helpful :)

    • @IThinkThereforeITeach
      @IThinkThereforeITeach  8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Great question and I totally understand why you would feel this way. You wouldn't need to cover all the sections only the ones that relate to the question and/or your line of argument. So you wouldn't need to mention evolution or the extra names/details if it is not relevant to the question. Hope this makes sense :)

    • @chloew968
      @chloew968 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@IThinkThereforeITeachPerfect, thanks so much!

  • @intelligentdesign2295
    @intelligentdesign2295 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Many of Hume 's objections can be answered.
    Objection (1) "A great number of men join in building a house or a ship, in rearing a
    city, in framing a commonwealth: why may not several deities combine in contriving and framing a world?" (Dialogues)
    Response:
    "And, to jump ahead a bit, there are two further problems with
    polytheism as an explanation of the existence of not merely a universe but a universe governed throughout space and time by the same
    natural laws .
    If this order in the world is to be explained by many gods, then some
    explanation is required for how and why they cooperate in producing
    the same patterns of order throughout the universe. This becomes a
    new datum requiring explanation for the same reason as the fact of
    order itself. The need for further explanation ends when we postulate
    one being who is the cause of the existence of all others, and the
    simplest conceivable such-I urge-is God. And, further, the power
    of polytheism to explain this order in the world is perhaps not as
    great as that of theism. If there were more than one deity responsible
    for the order of the universe, we would expect to see characteristic
    marks of the handiwork of different deities in different parts of the
    universe, just as we see different kinds of workmanship in the
    different houses of a city. We would expect to find an inverse square
    of law of gravitation obeyed in one part of the universe, and in
    another part a law that was just short of being an inverse square
    law-without the difference being explicable in terms of a more
    general law." (Richard Swinburne "The Existence Of God")
    "If the
    physical universe is the product of intelligent design, rather than
    being a pure accident, it is more likely to be the handiwork of only
    one rather than more than one intelligence. This is so for two broad
    reasons. The first reason is the need for theoretical parsimony. In the
    absence of any evidence for supposing the universe to be the handiwork of more than one intelligence rather than only one, then, faced
    with a choice between supposing it the handiwork of one or of more
    than one intelligent designer, we should choose to suppose it to be the
    creation of only one. For it is not necessary to postulate more than
    one to account for the phenomena in question. The second reason for
    preferring the hypothesis of there being only one designer of the
    universe to supposing more than one is that the general harmony and
    uniformity of everything in the universe suggest that, should it be the
    product of design, it is more likely to be the handiwork of a single
    designer, rather than a plurality of designers who might have been
    expected to have left in their joint product some trace of their plural
    individualities. " (David Conway "Rediscovery Of Wisdom")
    Objection (2) "[I]f we survey the universe ..., it bears a great resemblance to an
    animal or organized body, and seems actuated with a like principle
    of life and motion. A continual circulation of matter in it ...: a
    continual waste in every part is incessantly repaired: the closest
    sympathy is perceived throughout the entire system: and each part
    or member ... operates both to its own preservation and to that of
    the whole [I]t must be confessed, that... the universe resembles
    more a human body than it does the works of human art and
    contrivance [Y]et is the analogy also defective in many circumstances ...: no organs of sense; no seat of thought or reason; no one
    precise origin of motion and action. In short, it seems to bear a
    stronger resemblance to a vegetable than to an animal." (Dialogues)
    Response:
    "Hume's argument seems weak. Hume's claim is that the physical
    universe - more specifically, our solar system - bears a closer resemblance to some animal or a vegetable than it does some machine or
    other artefact. The claim is unconvincing.
    In its manifest workings,
    the physical universe in general, and our own solar system in particular, exhibits a degree of regularity and predictability that far exceeds
    that which is exhibited by any animal or vegetable. After all, it is by
    the sun that we set our clocks and not by the comings and goings of
    sun-flowers or salamanders! That this is so suggests that the physical
    universe more closely resembles some regular and predictable
    machine or artefact, for example a clock, than it does any far less
    regular and predictable animal or vegetable. " (David Conway "Rediscovery Of Wisdom")
    Objection (3) “But how this argument can have place where the objects, as in the present case, are single, individual, without parallel or specific resemblance, may be difficult to explain.” (Dialogues)
    Response:
    "From time to time various writers have told us that we cannot
    reach any conclusions about the origin or development of the universe, since it is the only one of which we have knowledge, and
    rational inquiry can reach conclusions only about objects that belong
    to kinds, for example, it can reach a conclusion about what will
    happen to this bit of iron only because there are other bits of iron,
    the behaviour of which can be studied. This objection has the
    surprising, and to most of these writers unwelcome, consequence,
    that physical cosmology could not reach justified conclusions about
    such matters as the size, age, rate of expansion, and density of the
    universe as a whole (because it is the only one of which we have
    knowledge); and also that physical anthropology could not reach
    conclusions about the origin and development of the human race
    (because, as far as our knowledge goes, it is the only one of its kind).
    The implausibility of these consequences leads us to doubt the
    original objection, which is indeed totally misguided." (Richard Swinburne "The Existence Of God")
    "By tracing the origin of
    the physical universe to a supposed 'Big Bang', modern cosmology
    places Hume in the following dilemma. Either, he must deny that the
    physical universe as a whole is singular and unique, on the grounds
    that it resembles other things besides it that explode, such as
    grenades. Or, alternatively, should he insist on the uniqueness of the
    physical universe, he must concede that there are some unique things
    which are capable of standing as terms of causal relations. " (David Conway "Rediscovery Of Wisdom")
    Objection (4) "Nature seems to have formed an exact calculation of the necessities
    of her creatures; and like a rigid master, has afforded them little
    more powers or endowments, than what are strictly sufficient to
    supply those necessities. An indulgent parent would have bestowed
    a large stock, in order to guard against accidents, and secure the
    happiness and welfare of the creature, in the most unfortunate
    concurrence of circumstances. Every course of life would not have
    been so surrounded with precipices, that the least departure from
    the true path, by mistake or necessity, must involve us in misery
    and ruin." (Dialogues)
    Response:
    "The third consideration which Hume proffers in support of his claim
    that (at least some of) the natural evil in the world is gratuitous is that,
    were the universe the handiwork of some benevolent intelligence, its
    inhabitants might have been expected to be better provisioned than
    they are with the wherewithal for their enjoying felicity. Again, Hume
    fails to supply adequate reason for supposing this to be so. For
    example, were sheep better able to evade the fox, then foxes would
    have been less well able to survive and flourish. Should it be suggested
    that the world would have been a better place had sheep been allowed
    to graze without any predators, we might wonder whether they might
    not then have reproduced beyond the point at which pastures might
    have been able to sustain them, ... and so on. " (David Conway "Rediscovery Of Wisdom")

    • @IThinkThereforeITeach
      @IThinkThereforeITeach  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thank you for talking the time to write responses against Hume. These will really help students to extend their answers :)

  • @sethmitchell7469
    @sethmitchell7469 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    please may you do one of these for the ontological argument?

    • @IThinkThereforeITeach
      @IThinkThereforeITeach  2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Hi Seth, as it is not specified for this year's exam I will try do a video focusing on a posteriori vs a priori but probably won't cover Ontological until after exam. It will definitely get done but at the moment I have quite a list of videos in prep for exam :)

    • @sethmitchell7469
      @sethmitchell7469 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@IThinkThereforeITeach No worries, thank you anyway!

  • @eviebeeswax1307
    @eviebeeswax1307 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    could i bring the watch analogy into the problem of evil?

    • @IThinkThereforeITeach
      @IThinkThereforeITeach  ปีที่แล้ว

      Yes I could see how that would work. Do you mean when talking about design? Looking at God's logical attributes? You also have Hume's criticism of the POE :)

  • @zaynaadli6216
    @zaynaadli6216 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    hey can u make a video on hicks theodicy strengths and weaknesses

  • @HenaKaur
    @HenaKaur 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hi, what did Cicero see when he 'looked up to the sky?'

    • @IThinkThereforeITeach
      @IThinkThereforeITeach  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      We can assume he either meant the sun or moon/ stars. He is pointing to the grandure of design and how when you look to the sky to appreciate the immenseness of creation :)

  • @victoriabaker2662
    @victoriabaker2662 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    would you recommend writing about Paley or Aquinas first in an essay?

    • @IThinkThereforeITeach
      @IThinkThereforeITeach  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Hi Victoria, it purely depends on the question. If question on Paley then every paragraph and line of argument needs to focus on him. If Aquinas/Hume or evolution do the same. If the question is open e.g Critcslly assess the teleological argument then you could start with either. Probably Aquinas is easiest in this case as his argument influenced Paely, hence the overlaps on regularity. Hope this helps :)

    • @victoriabaker2662
      @victoriabaker2662 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@IThinkThereforeITeach ohh okay, thank you that's helpful

  • @iamlikecam
    @iamlikecam 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hi, do you absolutely have to know about the Aesthetic Argument? I find it quite hard to understand and don’t really know how to use it in an essay.

    • @IThinkThereforeITeach
      @IThinkThereforeITeach  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Hi Cameron, no the aesthetic argument is an extra name/ point so you would not need to use it. It simply means we appreciate beauty which is beyond our evolutionary need for fight and flight...therefore it could be argued that there is more to existence than just evolution :)

  • @zoeb1099
    @zoeb1099 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hi Miss! i’m a bit confused- is the goldilocks argument the same as the fine tuning argument? or are they different? if so can you explain the fine tuning argument please!

    • @IThinkThereforeITeach
      @IThinkThereforeITeach  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The goldilocks argument is about the perfect positioning of the earth from the sun (not to hot not to cold) for life. Fine tuning argument is a modern spin on Teleolgical using advancements in science (physics/big bang) to say about how earth is finely tuned for life to exist and this could point to God as creator. So yes they are very similar :)

    • @zoeb1099
      @zoeb1099 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@IThinkThereforeITeach oh ok thank you!! does this mean that the fine tuning argument and the anthropic principle are the same then?

    • @IThinkThereforeITeach
      @IThinkThereforeITeach  ปีที่แล้ว

      You could link them together as the Anthropic argument focuses on how evolution and design can work together :)

    • @zoeb1099
      @zoeb1099 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@IThinkThereforeITeach perfect thank you so so much!!!

  • @aleeha1850
    @aleeha1850 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hello! Could you possibly do a video on essay structure for 40 mark questions (ocr)?

    • @IThinkThereforeITeach
      @IThinkThereforeITeach  ปีที่แล้ว

      Hi there are already quite a few essay support videos on my channel to help structure an essay. There are also a lot of tips on the blog (under same name) that go over introductions, paragraphs, conclusions etc :)

  • @LavaRushdi
    @LavaRushdi ปีที่แล้ว +1

    hi, does this video cover everything for arguments based on observation?

    • @IThinkThereforeITeach
      @IThinkThereforeITeach  ปีที่แล้ว

      Hi, this video covers everything needed for the Teleological argument (you would have to check out Cosmological for the other argument from observation). You may have covered other areas as well, as there is so much extra reading on the Teleological argument but this is what the examiner's are expecting you to know :)

  • @HenaKaur
    @HenaKaur 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Also, do you mark essays from non-students? My teacher marks my essays but they don't say what I need to do better at.

    • @IThinkThereforeITeach
      @IThinkThereforeITeach  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Hi, I don't mark essays for non students at the moment, however you might find some help and guidance from the blog as I write a lot of pointers and things to be aware of when writing essays :)