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  • Over the centuries, the effort to craft a perfect, bullet-proof argument for the existence of God has taken many forms.

  • There was the ontological argument of Anselm. There were the four cosmological arguments of Aquinas.

  • And they still have their supporters. But many modern philosophers feel that theyre

  • simply too flawed -- too inconsistent with our scientific understanding of the universe -- to be convincing today.

  • But there was a fifth argument posited by Thomas Aquinas.

  • And it was popularized several hundred years after his time -- in the late 1700s, by the

  • English Christian philosopher William Paley. And this argument for God’s existence is

  • still around today, too. In fact, it’s one of the most popular.

  • It’s known as the teleological argument. You may know it as Intelligent Design.

  • [Theme Music]

  • To make his case for the existence of God, William Paley gave us what’s known as an argument by analogy.

  • This form of inductive argument invites us to consider a particular state of affairs

  • -- let’s just call it Situation A -- about which were already likely to have certain

  • beliefs, and then likens it to Situation B, with which we are less familiar.

  • The idea is that, in the interest of consistency, whatever conclusions weve drawn about A,

  • we ought to draw about B as well.

  • You can make an argument by analogy about anything, but Paley used it to talk about

  • God, in what’s known as the Watchmaker Analogy. He asked us to imagine what we’d think if

  • we found a watch on the ground. Would we imagine that the watch simply appeared randomly, spontaneously,

  • on its own? Or would we see the complexity of it, and notice that its parts seem to come

  • together in a particular way in order to accomplish a goal? If so, wouldn’t we think that the

  • watch must have been made by someone, on purpose?

  • Paley was arguing that the teleology demonstrated by a watch would lead us to conclude that

  • it was designed by an intelligent creator with a particular end in mind.

  • Teleological means goal-oriented, or purposeful.

  • And we can easily pick out the teleologies of man-made objects. Got a mug here, as an

  • example -- it was created with a particular teleology in mind. It was designed to hold

  • a liquid without leaking. It’s got a handle put here deliberately, in such a way that

  • human fingers could easily fit into it. And its composition is such that itll keep

  • the liquid inside warm without burning the hand that holds it.

  • We wouldn’t assume that a coffee cup would simply come to be, exhibiting such perfect

  • design for its particular function, without someone having created it that way on purpose.

  • So, in the same way that the teleology of a cup implies the existence of a cup maker,

  • and that of a watch implies the existence of a watchmaker, Paley saw teleology in the

  • world, and assumed from that, God’s existence.

  • He continued his analogy by comparing a watch to a living organism.

  • Look at the complexity of the human body. Heart and lungs working together, producing

  • sweat to keep ourselves from overheating, transforming food into energywere

  • just generally amazing all around.Look at how elements of the natural world operate

  • according to complex laws that sustain a beautiful, natural harmony. Paley said this couldn't possibly just

  • have happened, any more than the design of a pocket watch could just have happened.

  • There must be a designer.

  • If you accept this analogy, then you agree with Paley that, just like the purposefulness

  • of a watch compels us to believe in a watchmaker, the purposefulness of the world compels us

  • to believe in a worldmakerGod.

  • And you might think this is a fantastic argument. It might even be what motivates your own belief in God.

  • There are lots of people who say things like sunsets and babies show them that there must be a designer-god.

  • But some of you probably aren’t buying itand you know what to do!

  • Arguments are refuted by counterarguments, so when you want to refute an argument by

  • analogy, you offer a disanalogy. Basically, you demonstrate that Situation A and Situation

  • B are dissimilar enough that the analogy doesn’t actually work.

  • So, to object to Paley, we have to identify a way in which elements of the natural world

  • like human bodiesare relevantly dissimilar to watches. When were talking about a watch,

  • an objector might say, it obviously had a creator. After all, we can take it apart and

  • see clearly how the gears fit together to move the hands and keep time. But there’s

  • so much in the natural world that isn’t understandable in the same way. For instance,

  • why would God have designed our eyes to have a blind spot?

  • Paley responded that it doesn’t matter whether we can understand how something was created.

  • The point is simply that it was. He might point out, for instance, that I actually don’t

  • understand the inner workings of my phone. But I still know it had a creator.

  • Whether or not I can understand how it was created is beside the point.

  • Next objection: Some parts of nature seem to be without purpose. A blind spot obviously

  • doesn’t have any function, and neither do nipples on a man.

  • Paley’s response here was: Just because we don't know there's a purpose doesn't mean there isn't one.

  • But this is a problem, too, because his whole argument for believing in God is that you

  • should look at the world and see purpose. So if we see some things in the world that

  • are working great, and really seem to have complexity and a definite use, and others

  • that don’t, that’s a flaw in his argument.

  • What’s more, the absence of any obvious purpose in things can lead people to start

  • searching for purposes, and effectively make them up. For instance, I could find a purpose

  • for this finger – I could use it as a nose-picker. It would make a good oneit’s just the

  • right size to really get in there and dig around. But was my finger designed to pick noses?

  • Probably not. 20th century British philosopher Bertrand Russell made fun of this

  • purpose-finding tendency, by pointing out that you could look at a bunny and form the

  • belief that God gave it a fuzzy white tail so hunters would have something to shoot at.

  • The point is: If we're the ones inventing purposes, rather than recognizing ones that

  • are inherently there, then were the real creators of purpose in the world, not God.

  • Basically, if you believe that God made eyes for seeing, then you also have to believe

  • that he designed fingers as nose-pickers, and rabbit tails as bullseyes, and blind spots

  • as ways for us to get into car accidents. So the counterargument here is: We don't get

  • to just pick and choose, and say God designed the stuff we want him to have designed, and not the other stuff.

  • Rather than searching for disanalogies, another way Paley’s argument has been countered

  • is with an alternative explanation for Condition B. Paley says bodies are purposeful, and from

  • there concludes that the purpose had to have been put there by an intelligent creator.

  • But another explanation for how bodies came to have the complexity and functionality they

  • have today, is natural selection and random mutation. We can concede that the existence

  • of a designer-god helped make sense of the origins the our world in a pre-scientific age,

  • but now we have a perfectly good scientific explanation for how the complexity of the world came about.

  • So, who needs a watchmaker when you have evolution by natural selection?

  • Another objection to Paley’s case came from 18th century Scottish philosopher David Hume,

  • who pointed out that, if were to take the analogy seriously, we’d need to conclude

  • that the creator that Paley posits seems to make a lot of mistakes.

  • And not just blind spots. Like, how about hurricanes?

  • Or why would he make our bodies with certain tissues -- like in the breast, or prostate,

  • or colon -- that are so incredibly prone to cancer? Why would he make umbilical cords

  • that could wrap around a baby’s neck? Why would he make butterflies have to wait for

  • hours, immobile, for their wings dry as soon as they come out of their chrysalis, making

  • them easy prey for predators?

  • Hume pointed out that the world is chock full of stuff that looks cruel, ridiculous, impractical,

  • and contrary to life. A flawed world, he said, implies a flawed creator.

  • Now, the development of evolutionary biology over the past couple hundred years has taken

  • a pretty heavy toll on the teleological argument. But it still has many supporters, and their

  • method of defending their view is a good model for the way the Socratic method is supposed to work.

  • When your opponents raise objections to your theory, you need to either reject it, or modify

  • it in a way that responds to those objections. So, supporters of the teleological argument

  • set out to modifyand strengthentheir view.

  • Here are a couple of modern responses:

  • Contemporary British philosopher Richard Swinburne gives us a modern teleological argument with

  • a twist of probability. He says that, even if there’s another possible explanation

  • for the universe, we should go with the explanation that’s most likely to be true. And he says

  • that it’s simply more probable that God designed the world, than that it came about

  • through the pure chance of evolutionary processes.

  • Likewise, another class of modern defenses of the teleological argument are collectively

  • known as Fine-Tuning Arguments. These arguments accept the Big Bang and evolution as scientific

  • truths, but they maintain that, for the evolution of life to occur, it’s most likely that

  • God set up the precise conditions that it required, rather than them coming about by accident.

  • After all, if Earth were just a little closer to, or farther from, the sun

  • If the composition of our atmosphere was slightly different

  • If the content of our oceans was something other than what it is

  • Life would have never taken root.

  • A lot of people think these modernized arguments have more going for them than Paley’s did.

  • This is partly because these types of teleologists have moved from making assertions about certainty

  • to making claims about probability, which seem easier to get right and to defend.

  • Objectors will counter by saying that the problem with these arguments is, you can’t

  • really make a probability claim when you only have a sample set of one. If we had multiple

  • Earths that we could examine, we could see how likely any particular adaptation is, or

  • how unique the conditions for life are. Then we would know if it were likely or unlikely

  • to happen without God. But we can’t know that -- at least not now -- because we can

  • only access this one world, where we know that things evolved as they did. Thus, the

  • counterargument goes, Swinburne and other modern teleologists are right to recognize that if

  • things were slightly different, then life maybe wouldn’t have evolved or would have evolved very differently.

  • But that is wholly different from claiming that it’s unlikely to have happened in the first place.

  • So, today you learned about the teleological argument, objections to it, and responses

  • to those objections, and the responses to the responses to the objections.

  • But weve spent an awful lot of time talking about God’s existence, so next time,

  • let’s consider what god is like if it exists.

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  • Crash Course Philosophy is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios. You can head over

  • to their channel and check out amazing shows like The Art Assignment, The Good Stuff, and Blank on Blank.

  • This episode of Crash Course was filmed in the Doctor Cheryl C. Kinney Crash Course Studio

  • with the help of all of these amazing people and our equally fantastic graphics team is Thought Cafe.

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智能設計。哲學速成班#11 (Intelligent Design: Crash Course Philosophy #11)

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    Jack 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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