To What Extent Were the Logical Positivists Successful in Arguing That All Religious Language Is Meaningless?

539 Words3 Pages
Religious language is the way of communicating ideas about belief, faith and God. Religious language can be interpreted in different ways by each individual. The logical positivists were a group of people who belonged to the Vienna Circle in the 1920s-30s. They believed that any assertion made which was meaningful has to be verified with a fixed conclusion. They treated claims made about God as cognitive, meaning that the assertions made are meant to be taken as facts or universal truth claims rather than non-cognitive meaning on a personal level for believers. They believed that language was only meaningful if it was analytically or synthetically verified. Analytic statements are a priori (based on logic) and synthetic statements are a posteriori (based on empirical evidence). They created a test called verification principle to see if religious language was meaningful; Statements can only be meaningful if it can be demonstrated. One could argue that the logical positivists were unsuccessful in arguing that religious language is meaningless because the verification principle has many weaknesses. For example Strong verification is not possible to talk meaningfully about history as no self- observation can confirm historical events. Swinburne stated that strong verification excludes all types of universal statements as there may be a random event that occurs that may mean that this cannot be verified. However, A.J Ayer developed a solution for this which is the weak verification principle. This form of the principle allows for statements to have meaning if the means to which a statement can be verified are known. This allows for historical & scientific statements to be seen as meaningful. For example the statements “Columbus discovered America” or “Jesus was resurrected” are seen as meaningful as you know the way in which you can find out the truth or falsity of the
Open Document