Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Lecture 6

Through impolitic statements, Galileo annoyed Pope Urban VIII, which eventually landed him under house arrest; does extreme brilliance give anyone the right to assume a superior stance? The major issue between the two was regarding causation of events, suggest a method for mediating such issues.

Lecture 5

Many of the problems that Gallileo had were because of differences between personal interpretations of scripture and the official interpretations. Should theologic knowledge be treated any differently than scientific knowledge; i.e. scripture is generally interpreted while scientific books are treated as fact NOT open to interpretation?

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Lecture 4

Imagine that God suspended all his activity for and specific period of time; how would this appear to us? Assume at first that naturalism (God's direct activity ceased after creation; effects are caused by the nature that God gave each thing) is the correct description of the world; then assume an occasionalist (all causation is directly God's will) perspective. Could the suspension of God's activity for a time help us decide between naturalism and supernaturalism (Hint: Think about how we sense.)

Lecture 3

Chose any premise you hold as true and consider why you hold it as true. Consider the foundations of your premise and your supporting premises. Is there a point at which a "leap of faith" is required to undergird your premise? Consider how "far back" in your personal knowledge system this leap is positioned. Do you remain confident of it? Why or Why not? (Adapted from the course Guide Book.)