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Tuesday, November 1, 2016

Teleology



Who made the watch?

The “Design” Argument: Teleology

One of the oldest arguments to support the existence of God is called the “argument from design” or the “teleological” or cosmological argument. The teleological argument tells us that where there is design, there must be a designer. Wherever we make a close study of the phenomena of the observable world, we find an irreducible complexity.  This complex design cannot have been produced exclusively through random processes driven purely by chance. The universe is perfectly fit for life. It is unreasonable to assume that everything is a coincidence. A purely materialistic explanation does not make sense, for it fails to explain consciousness. The structure and architecture of the cosmos is evidence of design and purpose. Intelligent design implies some form of conscious architect. The teleological argument claims that the irreducible complexity of the cosmos points to purposeful design on a higher level of consciousness: some form of higher consciousness responsible in the origin, fine-tuning and evolution of the universe.

The teleological argument enrages materialists and scientists whenever it appears. Science examines causation.  Cause and effect relationships are everywhere in scientific study. So it seems natural to think of what caused the universe, who made the stars and planets? And yet, the idea of an ultimate cause is abhorrent, for it implies an ideology, and science must be free from ideology. Science loves design and finds its best designs in organic life-forms. And yet the idea of a designer drives the evolutionary biologists mad. Design implies God.

Diagraming the Mechanical Flagellum of a Simple Organism



Since evolutionary biologists are gods of their laboratories, working to replicate the design found in nature they hate the idea of a designing God. They believe in “neutrality” and “objectivity.” As we have seen from our glimpse at quantum physics, however, there is no such thing as “objectivity.” Everything is subjective. Science is never neutral. In practice, science has served many different ideologies, from the social Darwinisim of capitalism to Stalin’s Lysenkoism and Hitler’s genocide. Science has served war efforts, population control, and even ethnic cleansing in its long and checkered history using tools like napalm, Zyklon B and the atomic bomb. That science is neutral is a fiction. So thinkers like Dawkins go to lengths to refute the teleological argument.

But despite refutations from David Hume to Richard Dawkins, the “argument from design” continues to provoke.

It’s hard to believe the universe is a product of chance. It goes against common sense. How can atoms and molecules organize themselves into the wonder of life simply through randomness?  A careful architect needs a high degree of perfectionism to execute a design. How is it possible that the designs in nature are so perfect? Spanish architect Antoni Gaudí (1852–1926) did his best to imitate organic forms in his creation of the Sagrada Familia in Barcelona.  His buildings seem plantlike and heliotropic as they reach for the sky. But wonders of architecture as they are they don’t reach the perfection they aspire for. A sunflower is a far more sophisticated architectural wonder than any of Gaudi’s creations and he knew it. The great Spanish philosopher Seneca remarked that “All art is an imitation of nature.” Artists are notoriously temperamental and hate when they are outdone by other artists. So the scientists are enraged upon witnessing the art within nature.
As arguments go, the “intelligent design” idea is called A Posteriori since it is argued “after the fact.” We weren’t around at the beginning of the universe to see the designer at work. We can only reason backwards like a forensic detective based on our experience and capacity to reason from the evidence.  The evidence of design is everywhere, and yet what do we make of the evidence? Is there purpose in the universe? Greek telos which means “purpose,” so another way to see teleology is the “search for purpose.”
Who Designed the Eye?




A World of Designs

 Why study arguments for the existence of God?

Lutheran theologian and existentialist Paul Tillich has said that the task of a theological treatment of the traditional arguments for the existence of God is twofold: they develop the question of while exposing their inability to answer the question of God:
These arguments bring the ontological analysis to a conclusion by disclosing that the question of God is implied in the finite structure of being. In performing this function, they partially accept and also partially reject traditional natural theology, and they drive reason to the quest for revelation.
In other words, argument might give support in our search for truth; but higher truth is only available through faith. Faith is not merely a question of proving God’s existence. One who has faith must act and live in faith. How one acts and lives in faith is the question of a lifetime.

Udayana Acharya

The argument from design is not new, of course. It has been a part of our search for light and truth ever since we first looked at the stars and wondered. The philosophical Greeks entertained such arguments. Both Plato and Aristotle had versions of the teleological arguments and taught them to their students. But in a world where faith was more important than logic, “proof” of God was not seen as a priority. The need for “proof” becomes more urgent when there is a challenge. In India the challenge came in the form of Buddhism. Buddhism entered India as a non-theistic ethical system which countered the Vedic Brahmanism which dominated the South Asian subcontinent before the 5th century B.C. As an alternative to Brahmanism, Buddhism was popular until around the 10th century when it began to migrate to China, Japan, and the Indochinese peninsula.
Udayana Acharya was a teacher of logic who defended theism defended from the atheistic  Buddhists of his time. His version of logic was called nyāya.  At the end of the 10th century, (984) Udāyana Acharya offered a series of theological arguments to combat the nihilism of the Buddhists. He engaged in many debates and did his best to refute Buddhism with his own particular logical form of theism.
Udayana's Nyaya-Kuṣumanjali was a logical philosophical work. There he gives nine arguments in defense of the existence of God.[1] Here’s his version of the argument from design or the teleological argument:
“Primordial matter, atom and karma act only when they are directed by an intelligent cause because they are non-spiritual. Just as an axe acts only when it is directed by an intelligent wood-cutter, in the same manner primordial matter, atom and karma, being non-spiritual, act only when they are directed by an intelligent cause. "
 “There are many proofs to establish the existence of God. The earth being a product like a pot must have a maker. The maker must be an intelligent being possessing a will to bring atoms together and to support them. That intelligent being is God. God having made this world causes it to collapse, and having destroyed it remakes it as a magic-show. His will manifests itself unhindered in all actions. Perceiving suitable materials (atoms) for creation and conceiving a desire for the same, He made this wonderful universe which is supported by His will.” [2]



Consciousn Evolution by Design or Random Chance?

Western traditions: Aquinas

Writing some three centuries after Udayana Acharya, in his Quinque Viae,  the Catholic philosopher. Thomas Aquinas (1225 – 7 March 1274) has given five reasons for the existence of God, among which, the most famous is called the teleological argument, or the argument from design, the 5th of the Classical Arguments.  Of course, Aquinas did not invent the teleological argument. But he is probably its most famous exponent writing in ancient times. Aquinas was the first theologian to depart from an entirely mystical approach or on based exclusively on biblical hermeneutics. He confronted the philosophical world with a reasoned response. The earliest recorded versions of this argument are associated with Socrates in ancient Greece, although it has been argued that he was taking up an older argument. Plato and Aristotle developed complex approaches to the proposal that the cosmos has an intelligent cause. This idea evolved into what has been called, the 'The Argument from Design.’
Writing in ancient times, Aquinas points out that things in the world move toward goals, they have purpose. The arrow does not move towards its target except by the archer’s aim. The arrows purpose is given by the archer. Just as the archer directs the movement of the arrow by aiming it, God has given direction and purpose to the universe through his design and maintenance. There is a hierarchy of designs from simple to complex, which implies design, purpose, and a creative designer with intelligence.
Who Designed the Eye?

Coppleston: Aquinas, theology and philosophy

Frederick Copleston: “The assertion that the most important philosophical event in mediaeval philosophy was the discovery by the Christian West of the more or less complete works of Aristotle is an assertion which could, I think, be defended. When the work of the translators of the twelfth century and of the early part of the thirteenth made the thought of Aristotle available to the Christian thinkers of western Europe, they were faced for the first time with what seemed to them a complete and inclusive rational system of philosophy which owed nothing either to Jewish or to Christian revelation, since it was the work of a Greek philosopher.
They were forced, therefore, to adopt some attitude towards it: they could not simply ignore it. Some of the attitudes adopted, varying from hostility, greater or less, to enthusiastic and rather uncritical acclamation, we have seen in the preceding volume. St. Thomas Aquinas's attitude was one of critical acceptance: he attempted to reconcile Aristotelianism and Christianity, not simply, of course, in order to avert the dangerous influence of a pagan thinker or to render him innocuous by utilizing him for 'apologetic' purposes, but also because he sincerely believed that the Aristotelian philosophy was, in the main, true. Had he not believed this, he would not have adopted philosophical positions which, in the eyes of many contemporaries, appeared novel and suspicious. But the point I want to make at the moment is this, that in adopting a definite attitude towards Aristotelianism a thirteenth- century thinker was, to all intents and purposes, adopting an attitude towards philosophy. The significance of this fact has not always been realized by historians. Looking on mediaeval philosophers, especially those of the thirteenth century, as slavish adherents of Aristotle, they have not seen that Aristotelianism really meant, at that time, philosophy itself.” [3]

Aquinas on The 5th Argument, the “Argument from Design”

The teleological argument as we know it today was developed by Saint Thomas Aquinas and included as the fifth of his "Five Ways" of proving the existence of God. 
Aquinas: “We see that natural bodies work toward some purpose and do not do so by chance. Most natural things lack knowledge, but as an arrow reaches its target because it is directed by an archer, what lacks intelligence achieves goals by being directed by something intelligent. Therefore, some intelligent being exists by whom all natural things are directed to their end; and this we call “God.”
Writing just before Darwin,  William Paley, in his 1802 work on natural theology made his famous defense of the design argument with his version of the watchmaker analogy and the expression "argument from design".
Mechanism of a flagellum

The “anthropic principle”

The anthropic principle is an extension of the teleological argument that proposes that the design of the universe includes a special purpose: human life.
The idea is that the universe is fit for human life. The universe might have been designed in different ways with different laws of physics; different stars and planets; bigger or smaller big bang. The majority of potential universes would be unfit for human life. The anthropic principle is the thesis that the universal design favors the development and evolution of human life. How is this possible if there were no design? Many different factors had to fall into place for us to exist at all. This is difficult to believe. The fact that the universe is fit for human life requires an explanation. Chance and randomness are not an explanation. The fact of the universe, its organization, design and fine-tuning are all evidence for a higher intelligence. Since the highest intelligence is God, he must exist.
The teleological argument tells us there must be a designer. All the examples of design and purpose in the natural world make it hard to believe that we are the result of a random process. Since the universe is perfectly fit for life it must have been designed that way. The cosmos is evidence of intelligent design. Teleology claims that the complexity of our planet points to an architect who not only created our universe, but sustains it today. The examples of design are countless,  But among them, for example:
The Earth is the perfect size and distance from the sun for sustaining life. The atmosphere, mostly nitrogen and oxygen gases, only extending about 50 miles above the Earth's surface is perfect for sustaining life. A different sized Earth might have a thin atmosphere like Mercury where life cannot exist.  Or it could have been heavy with methane gas like Jupiter.
Planet Earth is perfectly suited for life, with a perfect atmosphere, the perfect distance from the sun and warmed at the perfect temperature for life. Is it all a coincidence? Is there really no design? Is everything really simply a random product of a chance process? What of the hydrosphere, the water system that covers our planet and almost magically replenishes itself through rain and salty oceans? Is there no design? Without describing the amazing design found in everything from seeds to leafs to octopus, what of the human brain? What are the odds that random arrangements of amino acids will somehow organize themselves into a human brain with the capacity for reading this message and rejecting its logic?

Monkeys with typewriters

If a million monkeys armed with a million typewriters produce text at random will they produce the Bible, the Quixote, the works of Shakespeare and the Bhagavad-Gita? Will they type out the plans for a nuclear reactor and the operating system for the iPhone? How is it possible that chance has produced organization? It is an intriguing question. Einstein once said, “I cannot believe that God plays dice with the universe.”
Teleology argues that observable order in the universe must be result of intelligence, of consciousness. The design and organization of everything from DNA to the human brain is not an accident or result of chance.

Darwinism is a reaction to teleological argument

In a sense Darwinism itself is a reaction to the teleological argument. Every explanation offered by the theory of natural selection is an attempt to rid science of teleological principles. Theorists from Darwin to Dawkins, obsessed with teleology look everywhere for a natural explanation to the design they have found in life forms.
 It is difficult to believe that such complicated designs as the structure of a DNA molecule or the flagellum of a microscopic insect originate in a complete random process. The concept of natural selection is an attempt to give a natural explanation to what seems supernaturally wonderful. As a consequence, teleology is universally loathed by scientists. Their raison d’etre is to show that teleology is not necessary; that intelligent design is a myth. Naturally they loathe the idea that things cannot be explained naturally. And yet, in spite of all attempts to ban design from the laboratory, it is an idea with staying power. That is the power of this particular argument. Where the ontological argument of Anselm is difficult to understand and easy to ridicule, intelligent design makes sense. It is an easy argument to get. It has to do with what is called “irreducible complexity,” a term coined by the prominent Intelligent Design proponent Michael Behe.

In his recent book, Signature in the Cell,  science philosopher and biologist Stephen C. Meyer finds that the digital code in DNA is a good example of the idea that there must be a designing intelligence behind the origin of life.

A Cambridge University-trained theorist and researcher, director of the Discovery Institute’s Center for Science and Culture, Dr. Meyer argues that the universe is not only comprised of matter, energy, but consciousness. Some designing consciousness organizes the information that drives the evolutionary process at the cellular level.  Consciousness at the cellular level works as a kind of master programmer of life, assuring the organization of the DNA molecule.


Meyer observes[4]:
“the theory of intelligent design holds that there are tell-tale features of living systems and the universe that are best explained by an intelligent cause—that is, by the conscious choice of a rational agent—rather than by an undirected process. Either life arose as the result of purely undirected processes, or a guiding intelligence played a role. Advocates of intelligent design argue for the latter option based on evidence from the natural world. The theory does not challenge the idea of evolution defined as change over time or even common ancestry, but it does dispute the Darwinian idea that the cause of all biological change is wholly blind and undirected. Even so, the theory is not based on biblical doctrine. Intelligent design is an inference from scientific evidence, not a deduction from religious authority.”

In Signature in the Cell, the digital technology at work in the cell has been progressively revealed as the consequence not of a purely mechanistic, undirected process but an organic one driven by conscious agency. As we have seen, the teleological argument is nothing new. Arguments for designed existence have been around at least from the time of Plato in Book X of The Republic, presents his argument for design. The idea is particularly tenacious, having lasted centuries, outliving the Buddhist atheists of Udayana’s time and the doubters who inspired Thomas Aquinas. 

The Scottish Enlightenment philosopher, David Hume, who died in the year of American Independence, did his best as a skeptic to refute the idea of an immortal soul and raised strong objections to the teleological argument. He responded to Paley’s claims and objected to the argument from analogy on nine different points in his work Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion. You can find a detailed refutation of David Hume here. http://www.drchinese.com/David/Hume's_Determinism_Refuted.htm Somehow the teolological argument outlived David Hume, just as it has survived Charles Darwin, and Bertrand Russell.  All attempts to the contrary it will outlive Dawkins and Hawkings who have expressed great contempt for teleological ideas.
So far, we have seen the Ontological and Teleological arguments. As logical arguments go they have their critics. Perhaps they are not entirely convincing. But, as we have seen, logic and argument are inconclusive in terms of consciousness communing with higher consciousness. Knowledge is a poor instrument for “knowing” God. Above knowledge is faith. This may seem “anti-rational,” but insistence on a rational explanation for absolutely everything is also irrational. Some questions are beyond the knowable. That something is beyond the “knowable” doesn’t mean that it is nonexistent, but difficult to “know.”
As the great French philosopher and mathematician Blaise Pascal once wrote, “The heart has reasons that reason cannot know.”




1.            [1] Cause and effect argument: (Kāryāt) The world is an effect, all effects have efficient cause, hence the world must have an efficient cause. That efficient cause is God.
2.            Combinative Principle: Āyojanāt : Atoms are inactive. To form a substance, they must combine. To combine, they must move. Nothing moves without intelligence and source of motion. Since we perceive substance, some intelligent source must have moved the inactive atoms. That intelligent source is God.
3.            Fine-tuning or maintenance argument. Dhŗtyādéḥ: The world is sustained, maintained, and fine-tuned by some force.  That force destroys this world. Unintelligent and unseen principles of nature cannot do this. We infer that some intelligent reality is behind it. That is God.
4.            Linguistic evidence,  Padāt: Words have meaning and represent objects. The representational power of words has a cause. That cause is God.
5.            Evidence from faith, Pratyayataḥ (lit, from faith): Vedas are infallible. Human beings are fallible. Infallible Vedas cannot have been authored by fallible human beings. Someone authored the infallible Vedas. That author is God.
6.            Scriptural evidence, Shrutéḥ The infallible Vedas testify to the existence of God. Therefore God exists.
7.            Evidence from traditional spoken teachings and law, Vākyāt : Vedas deal with moral laws, the rights and the wrongs. These are divine. Divine injunctions and prohibitions can only come from a divine creator of laws. That divine creator is God.
8.            Mathemamatical evidence, Samkhyāviśeşāt : By rules of perception, only the number "one" can ever be directly perceived. All numbers other than one are inferences and concepts created by consciousness. When man is born, his mind is incapable of inferences and concepts. He develops consciousness as he develops. The consciousness development is self-evident and proven because of man's ability with perfect numerical conception. This ability to conceive numerically perfect concepts must depend on something. That something is divine consciousness. So God must exist.
9.            Unseen Power argument, Adṛṣṭāt: Everybody reaps the fruits of his own actions. Merits and demerits accrue from his own actions. An Unseen Power keeps a balance sheet of the merit and demerit. But since this Unseen Power is Unintelligent, it needs intelligent guidance to work. That intelligent guide is God. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Udayana - cite_note-csharma-1


[2] (A History of Indian Logic: Ancient, Mediaeval and Modern Schools) By Satis Chandra Vidyabhusana, 1920)

[3] Frederick Copleston, History of Philosophy Volume 3
[4] Stephen C. Meyer,  Signature in the Cell

Monday, October 31, 2016

Ontology 2






Proof of God
While the great souls have been blessed to travel to the holy places on pilgrimage to Vrindaban and Govardhana, I have been asked to develop a series of articles giving philosophical backing for for some of the ideas found in Vaiṣṇavism.  I hope these musing may be useful in developing faith.  While these arguments are not conclusive, they may help bolster conviction in the divine reality as a foundation for faith in our journey to surrender.

One of the early arguments that makes a claim as a "proof" for God's existence is called the ontological argument. It was first forwarded by St. Anselm. Anselm felt, as did Augustine, that understanding culminates in faith, and so did his best to justify the ways of God to man.

Anselm’s proof for God is as curious as it is audacious. He says that God is that thought of which nothing can be greater. Atheists are fools, but even an atheist knows what we speak of when we say “the thought of which nothing can be greater.” They scramble with laptops and pencils, scrawling equations on blackboards to avoid this construction. How could something exist where nothing is greater than that something? Even fools understand fully. We’re speaking of God. 


And try as they might to escape that conclusion, to ridicule it, they find a certain powerful logic in the reasoning of Anselm. They are certainly great thinkers if they are not great doers. They can easily conceive of something the thought of which nothing can be greater. They can easily think of that thing and know we mean God. Anselm’s next part is the audacious part. He says that if we can think of that thing that is greater than anything else, it must exist. The Being of God is found in his Conception. There can be no conception of God without His Being. 


The immediate counter-argument is that many things exist in the mind but not in reality. We can think of a unicorn, but a unicorn or a flying dragon. But a unicorn does not exist, so the argument is ridiculous on it's face. 

Well, before going further, we might insist that in the first place, unicorns do exist. A rhinoceros is a unicorn, an animal with one horn on its nose. Also unicorns exist in film and in Disneyland. Since perception is reality, there is a certain reality in films and Disneyland. A unicorn might  exist, in a possible world created by Disney. After all, "perception is reality." Again, the unicorn might have existed in the past and have become extinct, leaving no fossil evidence behind. 

But, leaving aside the “perception is reality” idea, a unicorn or a flying dragon doesn’t fit Anselm’s definition. A unicorn is not the “greatest thing we can think of,” and won’t do as a stand-in for his ontological argument. Anselm says God’s Conception includes his Being. If you can think of a Being beyond material reality, who is all-encompassing, all-pervading, eternal, infinite--he must exist, by definition. It is an argument easily mocked, but not well-understood.

A meme is an idea held in common by a wide variety of human beings. It may be argued that when everyone has the same meme there must be some veracity to it. Of course, the counter-argument is there, vox populi is not vox dei. Just because everyone thinks the world is flat doesn’t make it so. An idea may be widely held, and yet be wrong, as we have seen with the paradigms of Ptolemy and Copernicus. 



Anselm, however, is not arguing that an idea is true because it is widely held. He says the very idea of God proves His existence. The infinite being of the Absolute truth is apparent from the very transcendental thought. I confess that I was baffled when I first heard this argument. I thought, "I can't argue this point. People will laugh." So, this idea seems easily refuted on its face as flying in the face of reason: There is no evidence for the existence of the absolute. We have no mathematical model. And yet, Anselms argument is much subtler than it appears. It must be considered carefully and thoughtfully. And its contemplation will reveal its truth.

As arguments go, Anselm's seems weak, compared to others. Everyone understands the teleological argument; the “argument from design.” It is much easier to see: The evidence for a supernatural power is found in the organization and design we see everywhere around us. But this is an argument “after the fact.” I see what God has fashioned and admire his craft. Who but a divine, supernatural power could have crafted this world? Just as a detective studies the scene of the crime for evidence of its author, we can study this cosmos for evidence of its creator. 

And yet, the author has left the scene. We may make a forensic study: we look for God’s fingerprints, His DNA, evidence of his handiwork and in the end shout “Eureka, I have found it!” But where has he gone? Has he wound up the world like a clock and abandoned us? We are left unsatisfied by the teleological argument, since after admiring the artist’s work we want to meet the artist. But the ontological argument allows us to reach the same conclusion through meditation. God exists because we can think of Him. Not the cogito of Descartes, “I think therefore I am;” Anselm says “I can think of God, therefore He is.”

The argument seems naive, but is more subtle that it appears at first glance. Easily defeated by school-boys, the ontological argument haunts their professors. Refuted by Kant, the argument survives him. Bertrand Russell admired the argument, but rejected it after signaling its value: “The real question is: Is there anything we can think of which, by the mere fact that we can think of it, is shown to exist outside our thoughts. Every philosopher would like to say yes, because a philosopher's job is to find out things about the world by thinking rather than observing.”
(Russell, Bertrand, The History of Western Philosophy, Simon & Schuster, Inc., 1972, p. 417)



But Russell’s version is more superficial than he realized. Subsequent philosophers have demonstrated that the reasoning in the ontological is more subtle than it appears at first glance. Let’s take another look. We can frame the argument in a simpler way.

One of the interesting defenders of this argument today is a respected and influential philosopher named Alvin Plantinga who is the John A. O'Brien Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at the University of Notre Dame. His version of the ontological argument for God relies on modal logic, which deals with the logic of possibility and necessity.

Platinga puts the argument like this: It is possible that God exists. Even a true agnostic can’t rule out the possibility. In fact, it is logically impossible to rule out the possibility of God’s existence, since to do so one would need to study all the available evidence in all possible worlds. So let’s just stick with this point for a moment. It is “possible” that God exists. Now, if it is possible that God exists, that means that God might exist in some possible world. Hawking himself posits the idea of imaginary time, and quantum mechanics explores the possibility of parallel universes. So let’s just posit that it might be possible for God to exist in some possible world. Now here’s the logical problem. If God exists in some possible worlds, then God exists in all possible worlds.

The important thing to keep in mind is the definition of God. God is infinite and all-pervading. So if he exists in some possible world, by definition he must exist in all possible worlds. This means that God exists in the actual world, that is: God exists. Now, as we mentioned above, a sophomore, or clever fool, will suggest that we apply the idea to a unicorn. “If we can think of a unicorn, a unicorn must exist.” They will say. But since unicorns don’t exist, the argument is invalid. There are many things we can think of that do not exist. The idea that we can think of God and that therefore He must exist is therefore absurd, they claim.

Platinga’s argument is sticky. A unicorn might exist in a possible world. But if a unicorn exists in a possible world, there is no necessity for a unicorn to exist in all possible worlds. A unicorn is a contingent being, not a necessary being. Whereas God is a necessary being. If He exists, His existence is absolute and extends to all possible worlds. A parallel universe may exist somewhere entirely populated by unicorns, but there is nothing in the definition of “unicorn” that implies that such a fantastic being must exist in all possible universes. God however is a distinct idea: The idea than which no greater idea can be thought. 

By definition of God is infinite, absolute, all-encompassing. If he exists, he must exist in all possible worlds, by definition. Therefore the only way to deny his existence is to reject any possibility of his existence. But this cannot be a logical proposition. We must admit that God could exist in some possible world. His existence in any possible world means that by definition he exists in all possible worlds. This is Platinga’s defense of Anselm, as I understand it. If God’s existence is possible, it is necessary.

Now this argument may not be absolute convincing, but its logic is interesting to reflect upon. 

 While Bertrand Russell felt that Anselm had been conclusively refuted, others have left the door open to possible worlds. Anthony Kenny ended his New History of Western Philosophy  with a warning to those who feel Anselm t has been refuted: “Plantinga's reinstatement of the ontological argument, using logical techniques more modern than any available to Russell, serves as a salutary warning of the danger that awaits any historian of logic who declares a philosophical issue definitively closed.” (Kenney, Anthony, A New History of Western Philosophy, vol IV. Oxford University Press, 2007, p. 318)
For an interesting article on the ontological argument see:

The article reviews an interesting book by Kevin J. Harrelson, who has written a welcome historical and critical analysis of the ontological argument in early modern European philosophy.

KEVIN J. HARRELSON
The Ontological Argument from Descartes to Hegel
Kevin J. Harrelson, The Ontological Argument from Descartes to Hegel, Humanity Books, 2009, $39.98 (hbk), ISBN 9781591026396.




Friday, October 28, 2016

Ideas in Philosophy

With the movement towards video I decided to try to explain some of the ideas on the blog on youtube. Here's my first effort at streaming.





Saint Petersburg

Here's a little home movie of the trip to Petersburg, Russia.


Saint Petersburg