PHIL 1600 Lecture 13: Principle of Analogy

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19 Mar 2017
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The principle of analogy is if two things are similar then you have a good reason to treat them. It is used to justify the design argument. The design argument is guaranteed to be true. However, it is actually a good point to prove the design argument is true because evolution is a complex design. Evolution does neither prove or disprove god"s e(cid:454)iste(cid:374)(cid:272)e (cid:271)ut it (cid:272)ertai(cid:374)l(cid:455) stre(cid:374)gthe(cid:374)s the desig(cid:374) argu(cid:373)e(cid:374)t. David hume was a religious skeptic and he believes in the goldilocks analogy. If two things are too dissimilar, the principle of analogy makes no sense. If two things are too similar, then you are no longer comparing two things and are arguing nothing. Hume says human made machines and the universe are too dissimilar to be compared. One dissimilarity is the universe is everything whereas human made machines are specific much smaller things that operate separately inside the universe. Comparing a whole to a part is stupid.

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