The truth or otherwise of some statements is built in to the meaning of the terms used; the truth or otherwise of others depends on the state of things in the world. If they somehow express or describe that state of things accurately they are true; if not, they are false. But is the statement 'God exists' like either of these types of statement? “There are many questions in philosophy to which no satisfactory answer has yet been given. But the question of the nature of the gods is the darkest and most difficult of all…. So various and so contradictory are the opinions of the most learned men on this matter as to persuade one of the truth of the saying that philosophy is the child of ignorance.” Cicero, The nature of the gods The weakness of a priori arguments is that they do not advance knowledge very much. They help us to refine our grasp of a language, whether spoken or mathematical, and so understand things more clearly. The weakness of a posteriori arguments is that they are only ever as good as the observations that they are based on.
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QUESTIONS1. Explain, using examples, the difference between an a posteriori and an a priori approach to proving God’s existence. 2. “No one argument is sufficient to prove God’s existence, but together the range of traditional arguments suggests that faith is rational.” Do you agree? 3. “Faith should be a rational response to our experience of the world.” Discuss the strengths and weaknesses of this approach to faith. FROM THE TABLET
‘No one was ever persuaded that God existed or not by sheer rational argument’ Clifford Longley (26 May 2007) ‘Why are atheists so passionate, and indeed so irrational? One meets closed minds’ Clifford Longley (28 November 2009) The interdependence of faith and reason Pope Benedict XVI's speech to British society at Westminster Hall (17 September 2010) FURTHER READING
The Question of God: An Introductory Commentary and Sourcebook Michael Palmer (Routledge 2001) The Existence of God Richard Swinburne (Clarendon, 2004) The Miracle of Theism: Arguments for and against the Existence of God J L Mackie (OUP, 1982)
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