Philosophical Classics 2012
Friday, November 9, 2012
Evil? No Problem
In sections X and XI, Philo and Demea catalogue human misery and Philo
uses this evidence to prove that either God does NOT exist or He is NOT
benevolent. Is this argument sound? If not, where does the argument
fail? What about the possibility that suffering is part of some great
good like free will or character development (a theodicy)?
No Brute Facts?: The Principle of Sufficient Reason
You are hiking in a remote wilderness, miles from the nearest building
or even cell phone tower. You come upon a clearing and see a crystal
sphere hovering over you and emitting colorful light pulses in some
seeming order: red, blue, green and the pattern repeats. Should there be
an explanation for this odd phenomenon or is it acceptable to shrug
our shoulders and mutter "Stuff happens"? Can we extrapolate from this
case to a general principle of the universe? If so, can we prove that
God (or a reasonable facsimile) exists?
The Relevance of the Origin of Species
One important scientific development unavailable to David Hume or any of
his fictional interlocutors is the theory of evolution. For many
people today, both theists and atheists, religious believers,
scientists and intellectuals, the truth of evolution is bound up with
the truth of theism. So what is the significance of evolution for the
design argument? Does is it provide evidence for either side of the
debate? On this 153rd anniversary of the publication of Darwin's
seminal Origin of Species, it is fitting to ask: where might a discussion of Darwin have fit into Hume's Dialogues?
God -- Or Some Lesser Designer
In Chapter V, Philo devises several arguments that accept that the
universe has a designer, but deny that that designer is God. Given our
traditional definition that God is omnipotent, omniscient, and
omnibenevolent, is Philo correct? Or is there a response to his
arguments? Does it matter if the designer is the traditional God?
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Macbeth's Dagger and Other Illusions
Hylas objects to Philonous' idealism by claiming that on his view there
is no way to distinguish between veridical appearances and illusions.
In other words, idealism implies that the danger than Macbeth sees
before his eyes but cannot clutch is just as real as the dagger he uses
to kill Duncan. Is this a valid objection? How successful is
Philonous' response?
What You See Is What You Get?
Berkeley argues that skepticism is only possible if there is a distinction between appearance and reality. Furthermore, he claims that that distinction collapses once we deny the existence of material substance. Given these two premises, he concludes that skepticism in false. But is he correct? Does the distinction between appearance and reality collapse if idealism is true? Is it possible for God to perceive an object differently than me? Does that possibility redrawn the line between appearance and reality? Are there other problems with this argument?
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Who Needs God?
Berkeley argues that, given the truth of idealism, God must exist. Is he correct? If so, how valuable is this argument? Does this argument give theists anything to cheer about? Or can we get something less than the omnipotent, omniscient and omnibenevolent God that Berkeley believes in?
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