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PHIL 236 Philosophy of Religion

PHIL 236 Philosophy of Religion. The Design Argument. The Argument from Design. Also known as the teleological argument Is inductive Aims to make God’s existence probable Sometimes it is also “abductive”, i.e. God’s existence is the best explanation. Is a posteriori

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PHIL 236 Philosophy of Religion

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  1. PHIL 236 Philosophy of Religion The Design Argument

  2. The Argument from Design • Also known as the teleological argument • Is inductive • Aims to make God’s existence probable • Sometimes it is also “abductive”, i.e. God’s existence is the best explanation. • Is a posteriori • Is based not on pure reasoning (is not a priori) but on observable facts

  3. Versions of the argument • Two common versions • One appeals to biological facts • Paley’s version of design argument • Intelligent Design Movements • The other appeals to cosmological facts • Fine-Tuning Argument • Both see evidence of design in nature

  4. William Paley’s ArgumentThe Watch and the Human Eye • In a nutshell: • Artificial mechanisms like watches must have designers • By analogy, so must organs like the eye

  5. The Starting Point • If you found a stone, you might not infer that it had a maker • If you found a watch, you would infer that it had a maker • Why? • Unlike the stone, the parts of the watch clearly fit together to serve a purpose.

  6. Things you Wouldn’t Say • The watch might always have been there • The watch’s parts came together by chance • The watch merely exhibits “metallic nature” • Matter has to take some form; why not a watch? • Useless parts prove the lack of a maker • We don’t know enough to infer a designer

  7. The Self-Reproducing Watch • Suppose the watch could reproduce itself • Would we say it had no maker? Paley says NO! • First, this would make the watch even more remarkable • Second, even if this watch had a “parent” that had a “parent”... The series “wouldn’t tend to a limit”; • Each watch would still need to be explained

  8. Paley’s Analogy • The human eye is even more remarkable than the watch • Its parts obviously fit together to serve a purpose • Reasoning by analogy: like the watch, the eye must have had a designer and maker

  9. A Dated Argument? • Biologist (and passionate atheist) Richard Dawkins says that in its day, the argument from design would have been entirely convincing • Why? Because no good natural explanation for the biological facts was available. • Dawkins believes that this is no longer so

  10. Paley vs. Darwin William Paley 1743-1805 Charles Darwin 1809-1882

  11. Evolution and Design • Without evolution, design seems to be the only available explanation for the eye. • Evolution undercuts Paley's argument by providing a plausible rival explanation for the same facts • Note: the point is not that evolution is known to be true. The point is that it undermines the claim that divine design is the only plausible explanation

  12. A Mere Theory? • People often say: Evolution is “only a theory” • This is a misunderstanding of what scientists mean by “theory.” • A theory is a set of organizing principles that provides a way of unifying and explaining a body of facts. • Calling something a theory says nothing at all about whether it is probable • It’s not contradictory to say that a theory can be known to be correct

  13. Resistance to Evolution • In the USA, there is a high degree of resistance to accepting evolution. Why? • Plausible answer: people believe that they need to choose between evolution and their religious beliefs • We should ask: is this a false dilemma?

  14. Two Reasons • Here are two reasons for thinking the dilemma is false: • 1) The dilemma assumes that religious belief calls for reading all scripture literally. But many deeply religious people (the Pope, for example) disagree. • 2) The dilemma sees evolution as a view that denies the possibility of divine intervention. But that claim is beyond the scope of science.

  15. Intelligent Design • Intelligent design theory offers an update to Paley’s argument • It tries to show that some biological facts can’t be explained by evolution • This may be true. The question is: do the arguments of ID theorists show this?

  16. Irreducible Complexity • Michael Behe says: a system is irreducibly complex if removing any part would make it non-functional • Behe argues: evolution can’t produce irreducibly complex systems • The reason: unless the system were fully assembled, there would be nothing for selection to operate on

  17. The Example • Bacterial flagella work like an outboard motor • Remove any part, says Behe, and the flagellum doesn’t work. • Therefore, Behe says, evolution couldn’t produce it

  18. The Scientist’s Reply • The function a "part" has now need not be the function it had earlier in evolutionary history. • Selection can "co-opt" parts and systems that function one way in one context and use them in another for a different purpose • Therefore, “irreducible complexity” doesn’t rule out evolution

  19. ...Continued • The point is not that evolutionary biology has explained the flagellum • (though Kenneth Miller argues that we have many parts of a good explanation) • The point is that a good understanding of how explanations work in evolutionary theory doesn’t rule out an evolutionary explanation

  20. More Generally... • Nature is worthy of wonder, but... • ID is a "God of the Gaps“ approach, and • Biologists may come up with plausible accounts of ID examples. • Many people (including theologians and scientists) believe that evolution and theism can co-exist.

  21. Interim Summary • Paley’s argument has a serious rival in evolution, but • Even if evolution is true, this doesn’t show that God played no role in evolution. • ID theorists may be correct in believing that there is a designer, but • The kinds of arguments they offer are open to scientific criticism

  22. Fine-tuning Design Arguments • So far, we have looked at biological design arguments • These arguments focus on apparent design in organs and organisms • Another important kind of argument concentrates on large-scale facts about the universe • These arguments are called fine-tuning arguments.

  23. Robin Collins’s Analogy • Suppose we discovered a planet where there was • A domed structure • With an oxygen-recycling system • Ideal temperature and humidity range for life • Water-recycling systems • Food production systems

  24. Collins’s Point • We would not agree that this system was a product of chance • We would see it as a product of intelligence, but • a) Earth itself is such a system, and • b) More generally, various feature of the universe are fine-tuned for life

  25. Examples of Fine-Tuning: Gravity • Gravity: if the gravitational constant were only a little stronger, mammals our size would be crushed. Stronger yet and all stars would be red dwarfs – not warm enough to support life • If gravity were a little weaker, all stars would be blue giants – they don’t exist long enough for life to develop

  26. Another Example: Strong Nuclear Force • This force keeps atoms together by resisting electric repulsion. • A 1% increase would lead to almost all carbon being burned into oxygen; a 2% increase would prevent protons – and hence atoms – from forming • A 5% decrease would mean a universe with no molecule more complex than hydrogen

  27. The Cosmological Constant • This is the energy density of empty space • This constant is very close to zero • If it were even slightly larger, the universe would expand far too rapidly for stars, galaxies, planets and hence life to form

  28. The Point Again • The constants of the universe seem to make the universe into an “irreducibly complex system” from the point of view of life • That is: tamper even a little with even one of the many fine-tuned constants, and there would be no life

  29. Probability • The point can be put in probability terms: given the range of values open “a priori” to the constants, it is fantastically improbable that by chance alone, they would permit life • However, if an intelligent designer is responsible for their values, the fine-tuning is no longer improbable.

  30. Objection: Other Life-Forms • The fine-tuning argument points to various physical conditions necessary for life, but • It doesn’t take account of the fact that our form of carbon-based life may not be the only possible form

  31. Reply: • For the most part, the fine-tuning argument doesn’t focus on the details of life-forms (e.g., carbon vs. silicon) • Instead it focuses on such things as the possibility of atoms of any sort, or of stars that can provide energy, or of the possibility of chemical processes

  32. Objection: “Fundamental Law” • Perhaps there is a fundamental law that • underlies more specific physical laws, and • Implies that the constants have the values that they have • If so, the fine-tuning would be explained by reference to this fundamental law

  33. Replies • First, the hypothesis is sheer speculation • (However, the objector might reply that it represents a coherent possibility – just as God does) • Second, it would just allow a new version of the question. We could ask: why this fundamental law, rather than some other? • Why a fundamental law that calls for these values of the constants?

  34. Further to the second reply • John Leslie points out that our scientific models allow for other sorts of universes with other sorts ranges of constants. • Therefore, there is no good reason to believe in such a fundamental law

  35. Objection: The universe had to be some way • The universe had to have some set of laws • Further, there’s no reason to think any one detailed set more improbable than any other. • Looked at in this way, there is nothing to explain

  36. A Comparison • Suppose we consider a bridge hand. The chance of someone being dealt that particular, specific bridge hand is very small • However, we don’t think there’s any need to explain why someone got this bridge hand as opposed to any other equally improbable hand

  37. Reply • If we carry this reasoning to its limit, then nothing requires explanation. • This is because every situation, if considered in enough detail, is improbable • For example: the precise arrangement of the mess on my desk is improbable, but calls for no explanation. • But if the papers were stacked so that they formed a series of arches, that would require explanation

  38. Continued • Some values for constants would seem merely “random” or uninteresting – not in need of explanation • The fine-tuning arguer says: the constants of our universe aren’t like that. They fit together too remarkably when looked at from the point of view of life • Hence, they need to be explained.

  39. Objection: the Anthropic Principle • The (weak) anthropic principle says that the laws of the universe are “restricted” by the conditions necessary for their being observed • Translation: we couldn’t know that the constants are what they are unless those constants were consistent with the existence of observers • Supposed conclusion: we shouldn’t be surprised to find that the constants permit life

  40. Reply • Of course we couldn’t observe constants that ruled out our existence, but • The constants could still be improbable • If we had discovered that a wide range of constants was compatible with life, the fine-tuning argument couldn’t get off the ground • What is surprising is that the constants came out right even though “right” is such a narrow range.

  41. Compare (John Leslie's Example) • Suppose that five minutes ago, I was blindfolded and fired at by 100 marksmen with loaded rifles. • I couldn’t observe that I’m still alive unless all the marksmen missed • However: it’s still surprising that I’m alive, and calls for explanation

  42. Objection: Many Universes • Some physicists have posited theories that imply the existence of many “sub-universes” with differing laws and constants • If enough such universes exist, with enough variety, it wouldn’t be surprising that one or more permitted life

  43. Compare: • If you toss a coin 10 times in a row and get 10 heads, you will be surprised. • But if 1,000,000 people each toss a coin 10 times, then it would be surprising if no one got 10 heads in a row. (The chances of 10 heads in a row are 1 in 1024 for one tosser.)

  44. Reply • If the many-universes hypothesis is true, it would provide an alternate explanation for “fine-tuning” • But there isn’t any empirical evidence for many universes, and the theoretical arguments are very controversial

  45. Still... • If the theoreticians can make the many-universe view respectable (show that it fits well with other pats of physics, is elegant, could explain a great deal...) then it would be a legitimate rival to fine-tuning theistic explanations • Compare: we said earlier that evolution does most of its work against Paley by providing a legitimate rival view • We would then need to decide which view is overall more likely

  46. And Still Further... • That is something people could disagree about. • Therefore: if many universes are a good theoretical idea, that doesn’t mean that theistic design is a bad idea • It means instead that we have more than one viable hypothesis

  47. A Larger Issue: Who Designed the Designer? • David Hume (1711-1776) asks: • Isn’t God as remarkable as the things God is supposed to explain? • If so, doesn’t this call for positing a designer for God? • If so, don’t we set forth on an infinite regress?

  48. Mechanism vs. Magic • Ordinary designers assemble parts in familiar ways • Do we have any idea how God assembled the world? If not, does the design argument explain anything?

  49. In Short... • If there is a supernatural designer, this being is as remarkable as the human eye (not to mention the bacterial flagellum!) • Consequently, it's not clear that positing a Divine Designer explains much. It may just postpone the problem. • But... should religion be in the business of giving “scientific” explanations?

  50. More Generally... • Wars between science and religion are unfortunate • They are unfortunate for science if they put science in the position of addressing questions outside its purview • They are unfortunate for religion if they turn religion into a quasi-scientific hypothesis that science can slowly chip away at

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