Title: Religious Language
1Religious Language
- Michael Lacewing
- enquiries_at_alevelphilosophy.co.uk
2Univocal language
Talk of God is univocal. A word is univocal if it
yields a contradiction when affirmed and denied
of the same thing
- Objection this doesnt do justice to the
transcendence of God.
Duns Scotus
3Aquinas on analogy
We must extend our terms before applying them to
God. Talk of God is by analogy.
4Analogy of attribution
- Organisms are literally healthy (or not) food is
healthy (or not) by analogy. Food that is healthy
causes organisms to be healthy. - To say God is love is to say God is the cause
or ground of all love. - Two problems
- Is God literally the cause of love?
- Does love apply literally to us and
analogically to us? Or does it apply literally
and in the first instance to God?
5Analogy of proportion
A human father loves in the way and sense
appropriate to human fathers and God loves in the
way and sense appropriate to God.
- But if we dont already know what God is, how do
we know what it means to say that God loves in a
way appropriate to God?
6Ayers verification principle
- All meaningful statements are either analytic
(true or false in virtue of the meanings of the
terms used) or empirically verifiable (can be
shown by experience to be true or false or to be
probably true or false) - God exists cannot be shown true or false in
either way, so it is meaningless
7Replies
- The verification principle is neither analytic
nor empirically verifiable. Therefore, by its own
criterion, it is meaningless. Therefore, this
criterion is false. - Hick religious language is empirical
eschatological verification - Wittgenstein religious language is not
empirical, but is meaningful
8Wittgenstein
- Meaning is given by use. God exists is not used
to assert an empirical claim. God is not a
thing. - Religious language expresses a commitment to a
way of living or assessing life
9Tillich Symbolic language
Our understanding of God takes the form of
symbols, e.g. the Way, the Truth, the Life, the
Resurrection, the Cross. Religious language tries
to express this symbolic meaning.
- Symbols partake in what they express.
10Three implications of symbolic language
- Understanding symbols and finding the words to
express their meaning doesnt follow any obvious
rules. - It is not possible to give a literal statement of
the meaning of a symbol. - We need to be sensitive to the fact that symbols
point beyond themselves.