“FLYING PINK TEAPOTS IN SPACE”
However, after some
introspection and study, I concluded that she is right. I cannot disprove
the existence of her flying pink teapots nor can I prove the existence of
God. That being said, there is a more philosophically important and
challenging issue to be considered--that of evidence.
The teapot example
actually comes from the following found in Bertrand Russell's "Is There
a God?"
The technical term
for this type of argument is “Reasoning by Analogy.” That is to say that one might put forward an
argument either in the positive or the negative by positing a parallel and
analogues argument. While this may be a
fair argument in some matters it fails in the case of comparing God’s existence
or lack thereof with my friend's flying pink teapots or lack thereof.
Sorry my friend and
Bertrand Russell, your argument just does not work for three chief reasons.
First, there are no reasons whatsoever, to believe in flying pink
teapots. That is to say there is no
pragmatic reason beyond one’s unsupportable rational or should I say irrational
objection to God's existence to believe such a thing exists. Add to that point this. There are no logical nor are there formal
arguments for the existence of same. It
is all supposition and reactionary supposition at that.
Second is this. There
were and are a multitude of reasons to believe in the existence of God. However, at this point one must exercise
great caution. There is a great
difference between evidence that points to a reality and a formal proof of that
reality.
That leads us then to
the third issue and that is the matter of plausible or implausible.
If in saying there is
no proof, one is also saying that there is no evidence such is not true—one may
reject the evidence(s) for God but that is far different than postulating that
there is no evidentiary argument. Again,
one can reject the argument for any number of reasons but such rejection in no
way means that there is no argument.
In the case of God
such evidentiary argument is chiefly presented in four ways. There is the ontological argument, the
cosmological argument, the teleological argument, and the moral argument. In these arguments, there is evidence which
stands the test of reason and inquiry but again the limitation is that they
simply make plausible the possibility of God.
This point was made and made well in the debate between the late
Christopher Hitchens and Frank Turek.[2]
However vehement the
opposition, there yet remain the four arguments that point to the plausible
possibility of there being God. No proof just evidence that points toward His existence and away from His non-existence.
[1] -- Bertrand Russell, "Is There a God?"
commissioned by, but never published in, Illustrated Magazine (1952:
repr. The Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell, Volume 11: Last
Philosophical Testament, 1943-68, ed. John G Slater and Peter Köllner
(London: Routledge, 1997), pp. 543-48, quoted from S T Joshi, Atheism: A
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