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E-raamat: Why there is Something rather than Nothing

(, Trinity College, University of Oxford)
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Feb-2004
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191533679
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Feb-2004
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191533679

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Why should there be anything at all? Why, in particular, should a material world exist? Bede Rundle advances clear, non-technical answers to these perplexing questions. If, as the theist maintains, God is a being who cannot but exist, his existence explains why there is something rather than nothing. However, this can also be explained on the basis of a weaker claim. Not that there is some particular being that has to be, but simply that there has to be something or other. Rundle proffers arguments for thinking that that is indeed how the question is to be put to rest.

Traditionally, the existence of the physical universe is held to depend on God, but the theist faces a major difficulty in making clear how a being outside space and time, as God is customarily conceived to be, could stand in an intelligible relation to the world, whether as its creator or as the author of events within it. Rundle argues that a creator of physical reality is not required, since there is no alternative to its existence. There has to be something, and a physical universe is the only real possibility. He supports this claim by eliminating rival contenders; he dismisses the supernatural, and argues that, while other forms of being, notably the abstract and the mental, are not reducible to the physical, they presuppose its existence. The question whether ultimate explanations can ever be given is forever in the background, and the book concludes with an investigation of this issue and of the possibility that the universe could have existed for an infinite time. Other topics discussed include causality, space, verifiability, essence, existence, necessity, spirit, fine tuning, and laws of Nature.

Why There Is Something Rather Than Nothing offers an explanation of fundamental facts of existence in purely philosophical terms, without appeal either to theology or cosmology. It will provoke and intrigue anyone who wonders about these questions.

Arvustused

Review from previous edition Bede Rundle's brief and often forceful book is a wonderful stimulus to reflect on the ways in which philosophy can and cannot identify the excesses of attempted thought. * Thomas Nagel, Times Literary Supplement * The question "Why is there something rather than nothing?" is a good candidate for being philosophy's most profound and disturbing question. Is it not a complete and utter mystery that there should be anything at all? That there should be nothing seems prima facie more plausible than that there should be something in view of the greater simplicity and naturalness of nothingness as compared to somethingness. And yet there is something. In this stimulating and well-written book, Oxford philosopher Bede Rundle tries to make likely that the problem of existence does have a reasonably clear solution and, moreover, that this solution is of a distinctively philosophical, as opposed to a physical or theological, kind. . . . a valuable and, as far as I can judge, original contribution to metaphysics as a whole and, above all, a welcome contrast to much recent work of a more speculative nature. * Erik J. Olsson, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews *

Theology and Meaning
1(24)
Meaning and Verification
1(12)
Analogy and God's Attributes
13(8)
Other Minds and Religious Experience
21(4)
God and Explanation
25(19)
Miracles and Design
25(5)
Fine Tuning
30(6)
Laws of Nature
36(8)
Causation and Necessity
44(30)
Hume, Causes, and Necessity
44(11)
Necessary and Sufficient Conditions
55(5)
Causation and Connection
60(14)
Creation and Conservation
74(21)
Divine Agency
75(5)
God and Time
80(5)
Sustaining Causes and Persistence
85(10)
Essence and Existence
95(30)
Cosmological and Ontological Arguments
95(13)
Whether There Might Have Been Nothing
108(9)
Beginning and Ceasing to Be
117(8)
Matter and Abstractions
125(23)
The Necessity of the Physical
125(6)
Abstractions and Number
131(11)
Mathematics and Necessity
142(6)
Mind and Agency
148(19)
Making Sense of Mind
148(6)
Mind and Action
154(5)
Spirits and Forces
159(8)
Time and Explanation
167(28)
Time and Infinity
167(12)
Causal Series and Explanation
179(4)
An End to Explanations
183(12)
References 195(6)
Index 201