Design Argument
The argument that the universe's apparent design, order, and complexity points to the existence of an intelligent designer, typically God. Aquinas presented this as his fifth way, arguing that natural objects tend toward their purposes, suggesting purposeful design. The argument relies on the observation that the universe exhibits patterns of order consistent with intentional creation.
Real World
Richard Swinburne, Oxford philosopher, argued in 2004 that the probability of a life-permitting universe arising by chance is so vanishingly small that God's existence is the best explanation — updating the Design Argument with Bayesian probability.
Exam Focus
Always distinguish teleological (purpose-based) from cosmological (cause-based) arguments — mislabelling loses easy marks.
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