Spontaneous Generation: Design Beliefs and Proper Cognitive Function

Philosophia Christi 7 (2):345 - 367 (2005)
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Abstract

It is commonly assumed that there is some sort of tacit ’inference’ involved when we form the belief that intentional activity on the part of some (perhaps unidentified) person is causally relevant to the occurrence of some event. Against this "inferential model" of design belief formation I argue that in many ordinary cases we do not ’infer’ design beliefs at all, but that they form spontaneously and ’properly’ whenever certain conditions are met. This alternative model has a respectable historical precedent, better matches our introspective judgments about design beliefs, and helps resolve a puzzling objection to the standard "fine-tuning" argument

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