Logical Positivism and Verification
A philosophical movement, particularly associated with A.J. Ayer, asserting that meaningful statements must be either analytically true (true by definition) or empirically verifiable. Religious statements, being neither, are deemed cognitively meaningless expressions of emotion. The verification principle became central to 20th-century philosophy of religion.
Real World
Ayer's 1936 book 'Language, Truth and Logic', written when he was just 26, caused immediate controversy among theologians because it declared statements like 'God loves humanity' as no more factually meaningful than an exclamation of surprise.
Exam Focus
Apply the weak and strong forms of the verification principle separately — many students ignore this distinction and lose analytical marks.
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