The Poverty of Theistic Cosmology.
In: British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, Jg. 55 (2004-12-01), Heft 4, S. 561-614
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Zugriff:
Philosophers have postulated the existence of God to explain (I) why any contingent objects exist at all rather than nothing contingent, and (II) why the fundamental laws of nature and basic facts of the world are exactly what they are. Therefore, we ask: (a) Does (I) pose a well-conceived question which calls for an answer? and (b) Can God's presumed will (or intention) provide a cogent explanation of the basic laws and facts of the world, as claimed by (II)? We shall address both (a) and (b). To the extent that they yield an unfavourable verdict, the afore-stated reasons for postulating the existence of God are undermined. As for question (I), in 1714, G. W. Leibniz posed the Primordial Existential Question (hereafter 'PEQ'): 'Why is there something contingent at all, rather than just nothing contingent?' This question has two major presuppositions: (1) A state of affairs in which nothing contingent exists is indeed genuinely possible (`the Null Possibility'), the notion of nothingness being both intelligible and free from contradiction; and (2) Dejure, there should be nothing contingent at all, and indeed there would be nothing contingent in the absence of an overriding external cause (or reason), because that state of affairs is 'most natural' or 'normal'. The putative world containing nothing contingent is the so-called 'Null World'. As for (1), the logical robustness of the Null Possibility of there being nothing contingent needs to be demonstrated. But even if the Null Possibility is demonstrably genuine, there is an issue: Does that possibility require us to explain why it is not actualized by the Null World, which contains nothing contingent? And, as for (2), it originated as a corollary of the distinctly Christian precept (going back to the second century) that the very existence of any and every contingent entity is utterly dependent on God at any and all times. Like (1), (2) calls for scrutiny. Clearly, if either of these presuppositions of Leibniz's PEQ is ill founded or demonstrably false, then PEQ is aborted as a non-starter, because in that case, it is posing an ill-conceived question. In earlier writings (Grflnbaum [2000], p. 5), I have introduced the designation 'SoN' for the ontological `spontaneity of nothingness' asserted in presupposition (2) of PEQ. Clearly, in response to PEQ, (2) can be challenged by asking the counter-question. 'But why should there be nothing contingent, rather than something contingent?' Leibriz offered an a priori argument for SoN. Yet t will emerge that a priori defences of it fail, and that it has no empirical lefitimacy either. Indeed physical cosmology spells an important relecant moral: As against any a priori dictum on what is the 'natural' status of the universe, the verdict on that status depends crucially on empirical evidence. Thus PEQ turns out to be a non-starter, because its presupposed SoN is ill founded! Hence PEQ cannot serve as a springboard for creationist theism. Yet Leibniz and the English theist Richard Swinburne offered divine creation ex nihilo as their answer to the ill-conceived PEQ. But being predicated on SoN, their cosmological arguments for the existence of God are fundamentally unsuccessful. The axiomatically topmost laws of nature (the 'nomology') in a scientific theory are themselves unexplained explainors, and are thus thought to be true as a matter of brute fact. But theists have offered a theological explanation of the specifics of these laws as having been willed or intended by God in the mode of agent caution to be exactly what they are. A whole of considerations are offered in Section 2 to show that the proposed theistic explanation of the nomology fails multiply to transform scienctific brute facts into specifically explained regularities. Thus, I argue to The Poverty of Theistic Cosmology in two respects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Titel: |
The Poverty of Theistic Cosmology.
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Autor/in / Beteiligte Person: | Grünbaum, Adolf |
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Zeitschrift: | British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, Jg. 55 (2004-12-01), Heft 4, S. 561-614 |
Veröffentlichung: | 2004 |
Medientyp: | academicJournal |
ISSN: | 0007-0882 (print) |
DOI: | 10.1093/bjps/55.4.561 |
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