Hume and the argument for biological design |
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Authors: | Graham Oppy |
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Affiliation: | (1) Philosophy Program, RSSS ANU, ACT 0200 Canberra, Australia |
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Abstract: | There seems to be a widespread conviction — evidenced, for example, in the work of Mackie, Dawkins and Sober — that it is Darwinian rather than Humean considerations which deal the fatal logical blow to arguments for intelligent design. I argue that this conviction cannot be well-founded. If there are current logically decisive objections to design arguments, they must be Humean — for Darwinian considerations count not at all against design arguments based upon apparent cosmological fine-tuning. I argue, further, that there are good Humean reasons for atheists and agnostics to resist the suggestion that apparent design — apparent biological design and/or apparent cosmological fine-tuning — establishes (or even strongly supports) the hypothesis of intelligent design. |
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Keywords: | Hume Darwin Dawkins Sober Mackie Penrose argument for design biological design cosmological fine-tuning world ensemble chance theism God |
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