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Monotheism, polytheism, pantheism?
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All Flashcards in Topic 5.1
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5.1.18 cards
Monotheism, polytheism, pantheism?
Monotheism = one God; polytheism = many gods; pantheism = 'God' is the whole universe.
Omniscient?
All-knowing — God knows everything.
Omnipotent?
All-powerful — God can do anything.
Benevolent?
All-good, perfectly loving — God wants only good.
What is the 'perfect being' idea?
God as the greatest possible being, lacking no perfection — the source of the classic attribute list.
God as 'timeless'?
God is outside time — not stuck in a before-and-after like us, so God doesn't wait for things.
Negative theology?
We can only say what God is NOT (not limited, not changing), never fully what God is.
Why define God first?
'Does God exist?' can't be answered clearly until we fix WHICH God we mean.
5.1.28 cards
The ontological argument?
God is the greatest possible being, and a real God is greater than an imagined one — so God must exist, proved from the definition alone.
The 'perfect island' objection?
You can't define a thing into existence: defining a 'perfect island' won't make one appear — so why should defining God?
The cosmological / Kalam argument?
Whatever begins to exist has a cause; the universe began; so there must be a first, uncaused cause — God.
The 'what caused God?' objection?
If everything needs a cause, God should too; and if God can be uncaused, why not let the universe be the uncaused thing?
The teleological (design) argument?
The order and fine-tuning in nature point to a designer, just as a watch points to a watchmaker — and that designer is God.
Evolution vs the design argument?
Natural selection builds eyes and fine-tuning with no designer — just useful changes kept over vast time. The design argument must answer it.
The Nyāya argument from karma?
Karma must give each action its fair result, so there must be an intelligent overseer — God — running the moral order.
The four arguments for God?
Ontological (definition), cosmological (first cause), teleological (designer), Nyāya (overseer of karma).
5.1.38 cards
The problem of evil?
A good God would want to stop suffering and a powerful one could — yet suffering is everywhere, so the three claims seem to clash.
The free will / greater-good defence?
Suffering may buy something better — real freedom, courage, growth — that even a good God allows.
The weak point of the greater-good defence?
The sheer scale of seemingly pointless suffering (a famine, an unseen animal's pain) is hard to tie to free choice or growth.
The omnipotence paradox?
Can God make a stone too heavy for God to lift? Either answer leaves something God can't do.
The usual reply to the omnipotence paradox?
'All-powerful' means doing all that's genuinely possible; a stone God can't lift is a contradiction, not a real thing.
The argument from inconsistent revelations?
The world's religions describe God in clashing ways and can't all be right, with no neutral way to tell which is true.
What does inconsistent revelations actually challenge?
Not God's existence, but our confidence that OUR picture of God is the correct one.
The three challenges to belief in God?
Problem of evil (good+powerful God vs suffering), omnipotence paradox ('all-powerful' self-contradicts), inconsistent revelations (religions clash).
5.1.48 cards
Why might reason alone not settle God's existence?
Every proof for God has a strong reply and every objection has one too — after centuries the arguments deadlock, with no knockout.
Reason vs faith vs experience?
Reason argues from evidence; faith trusts beyond proof; experience is a direct felt sense of God — each has a strength the others lack.
Faith (in this topic)?
Trusting or committing to God beyond what proof establishes — a different kind of ground from argument.
Religious experience?
A direct felt sense of God's presence — certain to the person who has it, but hard to verify from outside.
The role of tradition?
Inherited belief from your community — either an accident of birth (a bias) or passed-down wisdom (a source of insight).
The 'symmetry' point?
If reason can't prove God, it can't disprove God either — so confident atheism leans on more than argument, just as belief does.
So what IS reason good for here?
It can't prove God either way, but it clears away bad arguments and frames an honest choice for the other routes to settle.
The 5 steps of a §B essay?
Find the issue → argue View 1 → test it with View 2 → weigh them → reach a reasoned conclusion.
Topic 5.1 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Nature and existence of God
Philosophy exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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