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    Our observations and experience are of finite effects — Carmelics
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    Challenges→We cannot attribute infinite qualities to God based on observation of finite effects

    Our observations and experience are of finite effects

    Natural TheologySkepticism
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    SkepticismNatural Theology

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    Causation2 linkedAgainst an attribute of God

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    Experimental reasoning requires that the cause be proportioned to the effectWe can only ascribe to a cause qualities sufficient to produce the observed effe...We cannot attribute infinite qualities to God based on observation of finite eff...

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    SEP: hume-religion
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    Any experimental reasoning of the kind that the argument from design employs must ensure that the cause is proportioned to the effect. That is to say, we cannot “ascribe to the cause any qualities, but what are exactly sufficient to produce them” (EU, 11.12–3/136; D, 5.8/168). If we follow this principle, however, we are no longer in a position to assign several fundamental attributes to God. We cannot, for example, attribute any thing infinite to God based on our observation and experience of f

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