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Philosophy Notes: A2 Religious Studies (OCR)

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This is a comprehensive set of notes covering all of the Philosophy content in A2 Level Religious Studies (OCR). Alongside the taught content, there are detailed arguments to use in exam essays, with full names of scholars to back up these arguments. There are also logical counter-arguments that can be used to support/disprove arguments in exam essays. I created these notes, which helped me to achieve an A* in Religious Studies, which included receiving a mark of 117 out of 120 in one of the papers. While these notes are specific to this particular exam and exam board, the information can be used to supplement learning in other exam boards. All A2 Philosophy content is covered in these notes, which are: Nature of God Religious Language - Via Negativa, Analogy and Symbol Religious Language - Verification, Falsification and Language Games

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Nature of God
Attributes of God:
 Traditional view – Eternal/Everlasting
o Omniscient/Omnipotent/Omnibenevolent
 Do these concepts fit together?
o By what definitions can God be all four and if we change the definition of
one, what is the knock-on effect
 For religious believers, God is
o Transcendent – separate from creation
o Immanent – close to creation

Eternal:

Timeless:
 Everything we experience is in time
 God exists outside of time with no beginning and no end
 Time exists within creation and doesn’t affect God
o Link – Plato and Forms – eternal + unchanging
o For Plato – time is the moving image of eternity
 Nicolas Wolterstorff – a timeless God is not just from Classical Philosophy
o The view of a timeless God has to be different from human experience of
life in the physical world
 Boethius – Book 5 of ‘The Consolation of Philosophy’
o God does not experience past, present or future – all time is present to
God at the same time
o God does not exist in time
o Eternity for Boethius is ‘the whole, simultaneous and perfect possession of
unending life’
 Like watching a film and seeing the opening titles and credits in one glance
 Supported by Augustine and Aquinas
 Augustine – if God made the world at a particular point in time, what was God
doing before this?
o Bible – a timeless God is separate from day and night
o Time does not work in the same way – there was no ‘before’ for God
 Aquinas – when we speak of God we are using analogical language
o God is not like us and we cannot use words to describe how he
experiences time
o ‘Eternity exists as a simultaneous whole and time does not’
 God is unchanging and outside of time
 Criticisms – contradicts a plain reading of scripture – God acts within time in
the Bible
o Counter – Don’t read the Bible literally, just analogically
 Criticism – idea of God being personal and active is hard to fit in with a
timeless God
 If God is timeless, it easier to say he is immutable
 If he is in time, he may be subject to change
o E.g. his knowledge of England’s World Cup win changed to knowledge
they had won it
Anselm’s four dimensional approach:
 Attempt to improve on Boethius’ idea of eternity
 There are two main perspectives on time
o Presentism vs four dimensions

,  Presentism – only focuses on the present moment, the past is gone and future
hasn’t happen
 Anselm – terms such as ‘yesterday’ and ‘last week’ are subjective to the person
perceiving that moment
 God is not limited by space and time – he is in the past, present and future at
the same time
 God is not just ‘in every space and time’, every space and time is in God
o We still have free will – God can see all the choices we have made and will
make
 Boethius – God’s view of our actions ‘as though from a lofty peak’
 However Anselm – God literally sees everything as part of his timelessness
o Therefore judgement and consequent reward/punishment are just
 Arguably the best approach
Criticisms of timeless:
 Swinburne – the notion of time being simultaneously present to God is
incoherent
o However this argument is weak – Anselm’s theory doesn’t fail when
challenged
o God is with us in every moment in time because all time is in him
o Thus he establishes a constant connection and interaction with humanity
 How can God be personal and act in creation/respond to people’s prayers
 Boethius – ends up defining a God that is intrinsically different to the God of
Classical Theism
o More of a Deist God – leaves questions about incarnation, relevance of
prayer and interaction
Defence:
 Paul Helm – God, considered as timeless cannot have any temporal relations
with his creation
 Language that suggests God acting personally in the Bible reflects people of the
time encountering God
o Moreover, we can explain many things that happened in the bible (e.g.
parting of the red sea)
 Maurice Wiles – God does not literally act in the world – would create a
partisan God
o God loves us all through the gift of creation

Everlasting:
 Solution to the problems – God is everlasting
o God exists and will always exist without end – however time passes for
God
 Swinburne’s argument – supports a present and active God answering
prayers/granting miracles
o Fits more satisfactory with the God in the Bible
 God exists within time and is aware of what we have/will do in
past/present/future
 Schleiermacher’s analogy of a parent – God knows us intimately well and can
understand how we will act
o Can react to us if not
 Seemingly portrayed in the story of Jonah and the whale + 10 plagues – God set
people back on the right path
o If God was unaffected then there is no two-way relationship
 Counter – God has some divine foreknowledge in the Bible – Judas betraying or
Peter denying

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Publié le
22 septembre 2025
Nombre de pages
13
Écrit en
2025/2026
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