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  • Crash Course Philosophy is brought to you by Squarespace.

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  • It’s about time that we had a serious talk about religion.

  • The philosophy of religion is often confused with theology, which makes sense, because

  • they both take God and religion as their subjects. But theology starts by assuming that God exists,

  • and then figures out what follows. Or theology might try to solve philosophical problems

  • that might arise from a belief in God. But one thing that’s never on the table in theology

  • is simply not believing in God. Atheism is not an option.

  • This is what separates the philosophical study of religion from the theological.

  • Philosophers take nothing as a givenand that includes religious belief. Everything is on the table,

  • and everything needs an argument. So, no area of belief is sacred, and that means even your

  • sacred beliefs are going to need to be examined, and evidence will need to be given.

  • Some people say religion is the one area where you don’t need argumentsthat faith alone is enough.

  • But philosophers don’t take faith for an answer.

  • After all, I might have faith Faith moon is made of green cheese. So what

  • Faith is definitionally unprovable, which makes it, from a philosophical perspective, not valuable.

  • So, if youre a theist, now’s the time to offer some justification for your religious beliefs.

  • religious beliefs. And if youre an atheist, it’s time for you to pay attention too.

  • No one’s off the hookwe all need to pay attention to these arguments, because

  • religion is hugely important. Can you think of many things that have been as influential

  • in shaping history than religious belief?

  • Probably not. So if we can get to the bottom of it, we should.

  • (音樂)

  • I’ll get to God in a minute. But first I want to go over a few other things that the

  • philosophy of religion is not:

  • It’s not about believing whatever your parents taught you. Because that doesn’t prove anything

  • about the truth of a religious belief. If how you were raised proved something about

  • religious truth, then every religionand therefore also no religionwould be true.

  • So, how you were raised can give you a reason that you hold a certain belief, but it says

  • nothing whatsoever about its truth.

  • Philosophy of religion is also not the study of the Bible, because you can’t use what’s

  • written in a book to prove the truth of the book. You need outside evidence.

  • certain things about religion. But it doesn’t help us here.

  • the time and place in which it was written. And such study can be very helpful in understanding

  • psychological understanding of our reasons for religious belief. Those are all wonderful things

  • that you can study, but they are not what were studying here.

  • What we are doing is considering whether we can offer arguments in support of belief in God’s existence.

  • you can study, but they are not what were studying here.

  • French monk Anselm of Canterbury. He offered a deductive argument for the existence of God,

  • based on what he understood to be the nature of God’s being, or the definition of God.

  • Because the study of being is called ontology, this argument, and others like it, are called ontological arguments.

  • French monk Anselm of Canterbury. He offered a deductive argument for the existence of

  • God, based on what he understood to be the nature of God’s being, or the definition

  • of God. Because the study of being is called ontology, this argument, and others like it,

  • are called ontological arguments.

  • Now: What do you think God is like?

  • Long, flowing white beard, robe to match? Nice guy, hard to reach on the phone?

  • Well, Anselm aimed a little bit higher. In fact, he thought that God is, by definition,

  • In Anselm’s words, God isthat than which no greater can be conceived.” So what does that mean?

  • THE. BEST. THING.

  • Just try to think of the coolest, awesomest, most amazing and wonderful thing you can imagine.

  • And whatever youre thinking of, Anselm said that God is better. He’s just the best.

  • In Anselm’s words, God isthat than which no greater can be conceived.”

  • So what does that mean?

  • Well, it means God must exist, according to Anselm.

  • After all, he pointed out, there are just two ways in which something can exist.

  • Something can exist only in our minds and be strictly imaginary -- like Santa, or unicorns.

  • Or it can exist in our minds but also in reality, like pizza and horses --

  • something that we can imagine, but that’s also real.

  • Anselm pointed out -- and he does appear to be right about this -- that any good thing

  • would be better if it existed in reality as well as in our minds.

  • I mean: unicorns. Theyre pretty great. But wouldn’t they be better if they were real?

  • Or the perfect romantic partner: smart, funny, hot, likes the same movies and games that you do?

  • Pretty rich? Would be pretty nice in your mind, but EVEN BETTER if they actually existed.

  • Well Anselm thought so too. And from there, he believed he could prove God’s existence.

  • Because, if we define God as the greatest thing we can conjure up in our minds, the

  • only thing that could possibly be greater than him would be – a real version!

  • And since were already imagining the greatest thing possible, there can’t be anything better.

  • Therefore, God has to exist, both in my imagination and in reality!

  • Anselm was sure that he had done it -- deductively proven God’s existence in a way that was immune to error.

  • Here it is, one more time, laid out as a philosophical argument:

  • God is the greatest thing we can think of.

  • Things can exist only in our imaginations, or they can also exist in reality.

  • Things that exist in reality are always better than things that exist only in our imaginations

  • If God existed only in our imaginations, he wouldn’t be the greatest thing that we can

  • think of, because God in reality would be better

  • Therefore, God must exist in reality.

  • Anselm thought this was a tidy little argument.

  • But one of his contemporaries, a fellow French monk named Gaunilo, wasn’t satisfied. He

  • suggested that we could run the same line of reasoning to prove the existence of literally

  • anything we can imagine. He came up with an argument with the exact same formal structure

  • as Anselm’s, to prove that a mythical Lost Island exists. He proposed: The best island

  • I can imagine is one where I can swim and relax on a tropical beach and ski down snow-covered

  • mountains all in one afternoon. I can imagine it, so it must exist. Otherwise, it wouldn’t

  • be the best islandthere would be one better And that one would have to be real!

  • Basically, Gaunilo said, you could make the same kind of argument to prove the existence

  • of whatever you wanted most -- but it wouldn’t make it real.

  • Anselm responded to Gaunilo’s criticism by saying he’d missed the point, that the

  • argument only works for necessary beings, of which there is only oneGod.

  • Folks, what we have right here is a classic example of the fallacy known as begging the question.

  • A fallacy is a flaw in reasoning, something that weakens or destroys an argument.

  • And when you beg the question, you assume the very thing youre trying to prove with your argument.

  • By adding this idea of “a necessary beingto his definition of God, Anselm

  • makes God’s existence a part of the definition of God. A necessary being is one that must

  • exist, so Anselm’s response assumed the very point of contention to be truethat God exists!

  • Other philosophers since Anselm have tried to save his argument by tweaking it in various ways,

  • and dissenters have continued trying to deflate them.

  • One of the most famous objections came hundreds of years after Anselm’s time, from the 18th

  • century German philosopher Immanuel Kant. Kant offered the point that, as he put it,

  • existence is not a predicate.” A predicate is just something that’s said of another object.

  • And Kant thought Anselm’s mistake was in thinking that existence is something

  • that can be predicated upon a thing, or be used as a defining characteristic.

  • For example, if a triangle exists, it necessarily has 3 sides. But it could be that no triangle exists at all.

  • Because the idea of existence isn’t part of how we define a triangle.

  • Likewise, Kant would say, if God exists, then he must be the greatest being we can imagine

  • -- but that doesn’t mean that he does exist. Predicates add to the essence of their subjects,

  • Kant explained, but they can’t be used to prove their existence.

  • British philosopher John Wisdom came up with a thought exercise that sounds a lot like

  • like a debate over an ontological argument.

  • It’s called The Parable of The Invisible Gardener, which brings us to this week’s

  • Flash Philosophy. Let’s go to the Thought Bubble.

  • Person A and Person B return to a garden after a long absence, and notice that a few of its

  • plants are still thriving. Person A says, a gardener must have been tending the garden

  • while they were gone. Person B doubts this is true, so they agree to wait and see if

  • a gardener shows up. After some time passes, they see no one, so Person A says:

  • The gardener must be invisible!” So, they put up traps and bring in bloodhounds to catch him.

  • When no one is found, Person A says the gardener must be intangible as well as unsmellable.

  • To which “B” replies: “What’s the difference between an invisible, intangible,

  • unsmellable, entirely undetectable gardener ... and no gardener at all?”

  • Thanks, Thought Bubble! Can you guess who A and B are really talking about?

  • To give you a sense of just how long this back-and-forth has been going on among philosophers

  • -- trying to either prove or disprove the existence of God -- John Wisdom came up with

  • this parable in 1944 … nearly a thousand years after Anselm and Gaunilo.

  • Today we introduced a new area of philosophyphilosophy of religion. And we learned

  • about Anselm’s argument for God’s existence, while also considering objections to that argument.

  • An important point to note here is that both Gaunilo and Kant agreed with Anselm’s conclusion

  • they also believed in God’s existence. They just thought Anselm’s argument didn’t prove it.

  • So remember, you can think an argument fails, even if you accept the conclusion.

  • When this happens, you should look for a better argument in favor of your conclusion.

  • This is exactly what Thomas Aquinas did, and well consider him next time.

  • This episode is brought to you by Squarespace. Squarespace helps to create websites, blogs

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

  • channel to check out some amazing shows like Shanx FX, Its Okay to be Smart, and The Art Assignment.

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

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

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