
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the Ontological Argument. In the eleventh century St Anselm of Canterbury proposed that it was possible to prove the existence of God using reason alone. His argument was ridiculed by some of his contemporaries, but was analysed and improved by later thinkers including Descartes, Spinoza and Leibniz. Other philosophers have been less kind, with the Enlightenment thinker David Hume offering one possible refutation. But the debate continued, fuelled by interventions from such heavyweights as Immanuel Kant and Kurt Gödel; and it remains one of the most discussed problems in philosophy.
With:
John Haldane
Peter Millican
Clare Carlisle
Producer: Thomas Morris.
By BBC Radio 44.6
844844 ratings
Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the Ontological Argument. In the eleventh century St Anselm of Canterbury proposed that it was possible to prove the existence of God using reason alone. His argument was ridiculed by some of his contemporaries, but was analysed and improved by later thinkers including Descartes, Spinoza and Leibniz. Other philosophers have been less kind, with the Enlightenment thinker David Hume offering one possible refutation. But the debate continued, fuelled by interventions from such heavyweights as Immanuel Kant and Kurt Gödel; and it remains one of the most discussed problems in philosophy.
With:
John Haldane
Peter Millican
Clare Carlisle
Producer: Thomas Morris.

15,271 Listeners

7,711 Listeners

318 Listeners

1,069 Listeners

2,112 Listeners

5,547 Listeners

1,791 Listeners

1,880 Listeners

611 Listeners

725 Listeners

284 Listeners

306 Listeners

1,735 Listeners

1,023 Listeners

502 Listeners

1,617 Listeners

304 Listeners

1,541 Listeners

164 Listeners

315 Listeners

3,175 Listeners

1,007 Listeners

730 Listeners

1,004 Listeners