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Philosophy of Religion

Created by I-Am-A-Car

Fun Trivia : Quizzes : Philosophy
Philosophy of Religion game quiz
"This quiz will cover some of the basics and not so basics of the Philosophy of Religion. It will be considerably harder for those with no prior philosophical knowledge, but all are welcome to play and maybe even learn something! Enjoy!"

15 Points Per Correct Answer - No time limit  



1. There are many arguments for the existence of God, but which of these argues that God can be known to exist "a priori"?
    None of these
    Cosmological argument
    Ontological argument
    Teleological argument


2. All the main arguments for the existence of God come in various forms from various people. So who proposed the classical ontological argument in his 11th century work "Proslogion"?
    Saint Thomas Aquinas
    Saint Anselm of Canterbury
    None of these
    Saint Augustine of Hippo


3. The teleological argument for the existence of God is based around purpose and design (the Greek word "telos" actually means "end" or "purpose"). One feature of the argument is intelligent design, the idea that the world must've been designed by an almighty creator. Theologian William Paley used a famous analogy to describe this. What object was the analogy based on?
    A Watch
    A Paintbrush
    An Automobile
    An Oven


4. Many have since criticised Paley's analogy. Which of the following is the name of the following criticism? "If the Universe hadn't came into existence in a way to accommodate intelligent life (i.e. humans) then we wouldn't be here to observe it in the first place, so we can only expect it to be this way!"
    The Expected Existence Proposal
    The Weak Anthropic Principle
    The Teleological Deduction Law
    The Cosmological Consequence


5. Moving on, a famous and extremely widely used argument against God is the existence of evil in the world. If God is omnipotent and omnibenevolent, then how can there be evil in the world? What do we call this type of argument against the existence of God?
    Problem of Evil
    Existence of Evil
    Contradiction of Evil
    Evel Knievel's Weevil Upheaval


6. The problem of explaining evil is a persistent one, so when we want to provide a plausible and reasoned justification for the evidential existence of evil, we create a ______.
    Answer: (One word, eight letters)


7. Spot the atheist! Three of the following philosophers are theists; click whichever you think is an atheist.
    J. L. Mackie
    René Descartes
    Richard Swinburne
    Alvin Plantinga


8. Spot the theist! Three of the following philosophers are atheists; click whichever you think is a theist.
    Robin LePoidevin
    Muhammad Iqbal
    Jean-Paul Sartre
    David Hume


9. Whose criticism of miracles included the following two points? - People want exciting and wondrous spectacles and accept them as incredible as part of their nature. Also, very religious people who are committed to their religious beliefs will often provide evidence that they know is false.
    Friedrich Nietzsche
    A. J. Ayer
    Bertrand Russell
    David Hume


10. "Pascal's Wager is an argument that supports belief in God." True or false?
    True
    False


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