Talk:Teleological argument

Latest comment: 13 days ago by Andrew Lancaster in topic Naive Teleological Argument
Former good articleTeleological argument was one of the Philosophy and religion good articles, but it has been removed from the list. There are suggestions below for improving the article to meet the good article criteria. Once these issues have been addressed, the article can be renominated. Editors may also seek a reassessment of the decision if they believe there was a mistake.
Article milestones
DateProcessResult
August 20, 2014Good article nomineeListed
January 1, 2025Good article reassessmentDelisted
Current status: Delisted good article


GA Reassessment

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The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


Article (edit | visual edit | history) · Article talk (edit | history) · WatchWatch article reassessment pageMost recent review
Result: Delisted. ~~ AirshipJungleman29 (talk) 16:19, 1 January 2025 (UTC)Reply

There is uncited prose in the article, and another editor on the talk page mentioned that the article is missing key information because of underdeveloped sections. Z1720 (talk) 15:17, 24 December 2024 (UTC)Reply

  • Comment. I guess I am the other editor? I don't see any posts using the words you've used. I would encourage other editors to read my real remarks. But in a nutshell, in terms of what I understand to be important for GA status I think this article has never yet reached a stable structure. It is still in a phase where people add new "stub" sections, and are likely to send the article in new directions, which might become stable. I'd encourage any editors who are interested in the topic to see what they can do, but I doubt that the article was ever really at GA quality, and I don't think that getting that label too early is necessarily a good thing.--Andrew Lancaster (talk) 19:17, 24 December 2024 (UTC)Reply
  • Support: Per @Andrew Lancaster's posts to the talk page. Even if citations could be produced where needed, the article lacks a cohesive structure. In particular it would benefit from an introductory "Definition" section describing the topic in general terms and distinguishing it from other major arguments for the existence of god. An "Overview" section might also be helpful—depending upon how much can make it into the lead.Patrick (talk) 23:15, 24 December 2024 (UTC)Reply
Delist While the lack of citations is certainly an issue, I think the bigger problem is the fact that it's structure is incoherent, making it hard to read. I think it should be re-written a bit. Also the fact of it's instability makes it further from meeting GA criteria. Sangsangaplaz (Talk to me! I'm willing to help) 13:24, 26 December 2024 (UTC)Reply
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

Merge proposal

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The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section. A summary of the conclusions reached follows.
consensus to merge ~ oklopfer (💬) 16:45, 9 December 2025 (UTC)Reply

I propose merging Natural-law argument into Teleological argument. There's very little content on that page, which is currently a stub, and almost all of it is duplicated here in some form or another. while a longer article on such a topic probably could be created, it makes sense to merge it into this article for now as a redirect with possibilities. Psychastes (talk) 17:21, 17 June 2025 (UTC)Reply

I have some sympathy for the idea. It seems to me personally that many of these old argument are in effect the same argument. Still we have to follow published sources, and we also have to consider the fact that if that other article is so short that's basically because no one has worked on it. Once worked out with proper sources it will inevitably be more complicated combine into this one. So I'm feeling uncertain. I suspect that the best method might be to work on getting some reasonable sourcing and definitions into that stub first, including evidence that reliable sources agree with you (which is likely, but I'm not 100% sure).--Andrew Lancaster (talk) 20:04, 17 June 2025 (UTC)Reply
Support merge. Psychastes isn't arguing that they are the same, but rather that natural-law argument is a teleological argument, as the text supports, and because it is so short (and overlaps so heavily), that it is better merged for context, short text and overlap; I also support the R with possibility, because I agree that it is independently notable and could expand in the future if someone is in the mood to create a more substantial article. Klbrain (talk) 15:19, 14 November 2025 (UTC)Reply
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

Naive Teleological Argument

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Noticed the Naive Teleological Argument is not included. This argument from C. Stephen Evans is an interesting and unique one as it draws on certain epistemological claims/theories. It is one that, I believe, would be of general interest for the public, but my only concern is that it might not be notable enough to include. So wanted to raise this here. Thoughts on this?

Evans:

https://academic.oup.com/book/11666/chapter-abstract/160601339?redirectedFrom=fulltext GreenRedGreen (talk) 03:05, 1 May 2026 (UTC)Reply

Seems notable enough and is actually just a common design inference available to everyday people. Ramos1990 (talk) 08:18, 1 May 2026 (UTC)Reply
I went ahead and added a section on this based on our conversation here. Thanks! GreenRedGreen (talk) 05:27, 24 May 2026 (UTC)Reply
Given the enormous number of people who've made variants of teleological arguments over thousands of years why should we be given a special place to this one? Is it widely cited?--Andrew Lancaster (talk) 18:48, 28 May 2026 (UTC)Reply

Not to be confused with intelligent design?

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The prefatory line: "For teleology in general, see Teleology and Telos. Not to be confused with Intelligent design."

The first sentence: "The teleological argument (from τέλος, telos, 'end, aim, goal'), also known as physico-theological argument, argument from design, or intelligent design argument, is a..."

Is there a distinction being drawn here between "intelligent design" and "intelligent design argument"? The fact, well known to anyone familiar with the literature, is that what is called "intelligent design" (whether approvingly or not) is so completely overlapping with the history of the teleological argument that there is no principled way to draw a distinction. The fact that some people have said that they are not concluding, "Therefore God exists," and that they are simply raising problems for any cosmological view that does not posit some sort of designer, does not somehow create a different type of argument or a different field of study.

In short, as near as I can tell, "intelligent design" is what skeptics call the teleological argument when they want to treat it as a pseudoscientific, failed scientific theory, and "teleological argument" is what they call it when they describe a distinguished ancient tradition of argument. Can you really have it both ways? It seems to me the teleological argument is to be confused with intelligent design.

I'm not sure what to do about this problem, but I don't think we should say false things in this way.

Larry Sanger (talk) 20:09, 12 May 2026 (UTC)Reply

FWIW there has been some debate on this over time and I tend to agree that WP has a history of downplaying the fundamentally interwoven character of the two topics (the teleological argument tradition as a whole, versus recent Discovery Institute etc stuff). The official WP position (the winning argument for now) is that the new-fangled "Intelligent Design" creationism is something quite different from more respectable looking classical, medieval and 19th century versions, even if it is grudgingly accepted that it is a member of the family. I personally don't think the difference is that big at all, although I accept there are important (and deservedly controversial) innovations, which mainly relate to ways of presenting arguments due to specific American legal and cultural things. The sources which get cited to keep these topics apart on WP have been IMHO cherry picked and distorted. In various debates about this a long time ago it was argued to me if effect (I forget exact words) that we can't allow the creationists to be given the kudos of a connection to Socrates et al. To put my cards on the table I find all these arguments historically interesting, and some of them are truly clever, but none are really scientific or convincing. As someone interesteed in the history of ideas I'd prefer everything open and properly explained. I have no problem accepting that recent Discovery Institute etc proponents are arguing in a more confused way than a Socrates or Paley, but it is still very much the same basic idea. Here is a very old idea I wrote out, and gave up on: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Andrew_Lancaster/ID_RFC_idea . And here is some detailed background argumentation which probably covers what you are looking for in more detail than you wanted! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Intelligent_design/Archive_74#Sources_relevant_to_first_paragraph Note that this is all very old and things might have changed. Also, I am not particularly interested in working on that problem again, but perhaps these old notes are useful to people interested in improving WP.--Andrew Lancaster (talk) 21:09, 12 May 2026 (UTC)Reply
I think we can remove the "intelligent design argument" since clearly teleological argument preceded the intelligent design movement and is more generic. Its not owned by a think tank in the US from the 1990s. Even the lead notes ancient Greeks like Aristotle, Hindu, and Confucian developments of the arguments. There is also evolutionary thinking that uses teleology sometime termed teleonomy and even Alfred Russel Wallace, who co-discovered natural selection believed in teleology in nature and evolution, but not necessarily a deity. Ramos1990 (talk) 23:43, 12 May 2026 (UTC)Reply
@Ramos1990: in reality, while the term "intelligent design" can refer to the movement, terms such as "argument from intelligent design" or "intelligent design argument" clearly have to be about a theological argument that is very old, and our best secondary sources use the term this way. Looking at it in terms of WP policy, the question is whether the "intelligent design movement" (think tanks etc, which has its own article) is the only context in which good secondary sources talk about the "intelligent design argument" (which I think should redirect to this article) or "intelligent design" (currently another article about the movement, but perhaps it should be a dab, or renamed "intelligent design theory", which would be less ambiguously about the movement's specific positions). This appears to be what you are assuming. However, I think the answer is in fact no. WP implies this, but actually the movement is not generally seen by good sources as having invented their own fundamentally new theological "argument". (The word "argument" is important here because when used in these combinations it clearly insists we are talking about religion, theology and philosophy, unlike the word "theory". I am not counting the legal and political arguments of the movement, which are clearly not what we are talking about.) I am concerned that Wikipedia is in fact censoring or distorting the link between the old theological argument and the real theological thinking of the movement. Ironically, the losing legal arguments of the movement itself are the only place you will find (misleading) arguments for a difference between the old theological argument, and what they believe in. (Ironically our pro-science editors on WP have therefore actually been making WP take the movement's most controversial position, which is that the "intelligent design theory" is not a version of the old "intelligent design argument" from theology. For legal/political reasons it was the movement who called it a scientific theory and tried to argue it was not connected to the old religious position.) Is the older broader families of theological arguments ever referred to as "intelligent design" in good sources? Yes it certainly is, for example Francisco J. Ayala (http://www.jstor.org/stable/23334140), or in the Kitzmiller ruling, but in any case when the word "argument" is added, then the meaning is unambiguously referring to an undisguised theological argument, and so we need to keep that term connected to this article. --Andrew Lancaster (talk) 05:16, 13 May 2026 (UTC)Reply