What is meant by “religious language”?
The meaning or use of words in a religious context. Ninian Smart said “talk of God”
What is meant by religious language being an analogy?
Thomas Aquinas. When we talk of God we are using analogies because we cannot really talk of God, but we can talk of God in relation to what we know.
What is analogy via negative?
Equivocal language
one word being used in similar contexts, but do not have the same meaning. e.g. “I love God” and “ I love my sister”
Univocal language
One word that has the same meaning in many contexts e.g. Black
Criticisms of analogy via negative.
Aquinas disliked the analogy via negative because it assumes opposites. There are many possible opposites of hate.
If we cannot actively know something, then how can be expected to know it passively?
What is analogy of attribution?
Criticisms of analogy of attribution.
There are things in this world which we deem to be evil, such as Hitler. Since by default, God is the maker, and therefore this evil, surely that then tells us that God is not good.
What is analogy of proportion?
A word is being used to say something is like it should be. e.g. Aquinas’ function. There is a difference between a good seagull and a good flea, but it is being used in the same way.
What is analogy of metaphor?
Religious language such as “Peter the Rock” is a metaphor, Peter was not a rock, but it had significance to its meaning. He was a strong base for Jesus to build his Church, meaning the first leader of the Church.
Criticisms of analogy of metaphor.
But does that mean that “God loves me” is a metaphor?
What is meant by religious language being symbolic?
Paul Tillic thinks that saying God is good says something symbolic about God, it has a greater meaning than if I said my dog was good.
Signs (according to Paul Tillic)
Signs have no greater meaning, they are simple.
Symbols (according to Paul Tillic)
Symbols mean something in themselves, something which people are willing to die for.
What does it mean for religious language to be non-cognitive?
Scholars on non-cognitive religious language.
J H Randall - religious language is non-cognitive and meant to rouse emotion, it is meant to stir people into action and give a sense of the numinous. (radical)
John Hick - religious language is cognitive, it is about religious statements.
R B Braithwaite - religious language is ethical. it is a way to live your life. If God is good, you should live in a loving way.
Mary Warnock - Vast majority of literature is not true, but it holds truths.
What is logical positivism?
A movement in western philosophy that believed that only statements that could be verified though observation and logical proof were meaningful.
The Vienna Circle
Group of logical positivists in 1920s and 30s heavily influenced by Hume’s empiricism and Wittgenstein’s picture theory of meaning.
What is the picture theory of meaning?
From Wittgenstein’s book “Tractatus Logico-philosophicus”. We understand statements through the key images of the key words, there are words that don’t have images. What is meaningful is something you can demonstrate. This applies to science but also to philosophy.
What is the God hypothesis?
A J Ayer
He rejected the ontological argument because God cannot be proved on a negative.
God is the most likely probability. By saying “God exists” a proposition is made. The proposition is a cognitive statement, and can be tested. We can test regularities in nature, such as boiling water at 100 degrees. In the same way we can demonstrate God’s existence through testing the regularities in nature.
However, testing the regularities in nature only proves that there are regularities in nature, and does not prove the existence of the God that believers believe in. God is a metaphysical term and beyond our physical realm and cannot be tested, God cannot be a hypothesis.
Saying “God exists” is a metaphysical utterance and cannot be true or false, so has no significance
What is the verification principle?
A J Ayer
strong verification principle
- Only meaningful if you can test it. It must be empirical
- Its meaningful if it is logical (tautology)
weak verification principle
- a criteria is needed for something to be verified
- evidence may be needed as part of the criteria
Criticisms of the verification principle.
strong verification principle
- this way, emotions, love and ethics are not meaningful.
- you cannot verify the strong verification principle.
- there are very few things you can actually verify, historical events cannot be verified.
weak verification principle
- just because there is evidence does not mean it is true.
- science does not follow this, they put forward a hypothesis, experiment on it, then adjust the hypothesis.
What is the falsification principle?
Karl Popper, Anthony Flew
The scientific method. The idea that something is meaningful if it is a tautology (true in every possible way) or you can put forward a criteria by which it could be proved to be wrong and therefore improved. Science is more concerned with being able to falsify something rather than verifying. People who use religious language do not accept any evidence against their ideas.
What is “language games”?
Ludwig Wittgenstein