1) WLC's Kalam2) Josh Rasmussen's contingency argument3) Josh Rasmussen's argument from consciousness4) Argument from beauty5) Argument from desire6) Argument from history (evidence for Jesus' resurrection)7) Argument from reason8) Modal cosmological argument9) Modal ontological argument10) Argument from moral facts11) Fine-tuning12) The applicability of mathematics13) Aquinas' Third WayEtcAnd arguments against God:1) Argument from evil2) Argument from ontological evil3) Reverse ontological argument (which may or may not be independent from 2)4) Divine hiddenness
Ben Stowell
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
How should we talk about belief in God? Part 2
How should we talk about belief in God? Part 1
Atheist = Someone who believes there are no gods of any kind.Theist = Someone who believes there is at least one god of some kind.Agnostic = Someone who suspends judgment on whether there are any gods of any kind.
Atheist = Someone who believes that God does not exist (with respect to some God G).Theist = Someone who believes that God does exist (with respect to some God G).Agnostic = Someone who suspends judgment on whether God exists (with respect to some God G).
1) The God of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, and the Prophets (Judaism)2) The God of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, the Prophets, Jesus, and Paul (Christianity)3) The God of Muhammad (Islam)4) Qualityless, non-dual Brahman (Advaita Vedanta Hinduism)5) Qualified, dual Brahman (Dvaita Vedanta Hinduism)6) That than which none greater can be conceived (Perfect being theology / the greatest conceivable being / the maximally great being / the greatest possible being / perfection instantiated)
7) Classical theism8) Neo-Classical theism9) Pantheism10) Panentheism11) Deism12) Pagan gods (Odin, Zeus, etc.)
13) The Tao
14) Plotinus' The One
15) Plato's The Good
16) John Hick's The Real
17) Apophatic theology
18) Process theism
Anyone can be an atheist, theist, agnostic, or innocent with respect to any model of God. Assent to one model of God may rationally commit you to assent to another model, and same for the inverse (dissent of one commits you to dissent of another).
So when it comes to positions on God's existence, I want to know the following:
1) Which model of God is under consideration? ("Do you believe in God?" – Do I believe in what?)2) Which model of belief or other doxastic attitude with respect to this God is under consideration? ("Do you believe in God?" – Do I what in God?)3) How do we score degrees of that doxastic attitude, or give context to it? (Does this person believe in God with certainty? Do they have a considered, well-informed view on the topic? – "Do you believe in God?" – Yes, I believe in God, and the reason why is... Or, No, I don't believe in God, but I haven't thought much about the topic... Or, I'm certain that God doesn't exist because... etc.)
Monday, November 18, 2024
The privacy argument against pro-theism is bad
The misery argument against pro-theism
It's true that strictly speaking God isn't lost, as God was never really there. Instead, it's more like losing your optimism in the world. The world was fundamentally good, and now it's not; the world is infinitely worse than I thought it was. You can reasonably ask: How on earth does one "grieve" infinite disappointment such as this? This isn't a normal kind of loss.
Saturday, November 16, 2024
Stream of consciousness: The psychology of the philosopher
I was raised in a Christian environment where the most important thing is going to heaven when you die, and to get to heaven you must believe rightly.
Romans 10:9 - "If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved."
If I can trade 80 years of misery for an infinite number of years of happiness, that's a good deal. That's an infinitely good deal. So for the Christian, happiness in this life doesn't matter at all. And if death means I go to heaven, then why would I care about my survival? So for the Christian, survival and happiness do not matter. The only thing that matters is your salvation and your relationship with God. You live to maintain your salvation (suicide entails damnation for most Christians) and to live for God's purpose for you and to fulfill God's commands. Basically, you want to look as good as possible come judgment day.
Practically speaking, living as if a perfect being is judging your actions is a pretty good heuristic for living a life you can be proud of. Prayer as a form of 'moral introspection' is incredibly powerful and helpful as a tool of personal growth. Problems arise though when this introspection leads to self-deception (God wants me to do the thing that I happen to also want to do) or moral arrogance (pro-choice folks are pro-baby-murder because my tradition says so and I'm committed to my tradition).
While Christians try to separate themselves from the ways of the world, finding value in the virtue of being different, Christians ironically fall into all the same psychological traps of tribalism as everyone else. As biological creatures, of course Christians have an innate interest in survival. Survival requires integration into a power structure, which almost always involves integration into a social structure. As such, social success means survival for Christians. Christianity itself becomes a matter of social success. (This is clearly true of pastors who make their money from working at a church.)
So Christians rightly believe that happiness, survival, and social success can come apart from truth, and so they distance themselves from "the world" and the happiness, survival, and social success they may get from being "in the world." But ironically they just end up creating their own world. If "the world" is wrong, they are stuck in their wrong beliefs, because they depend on those beliefs for their survival. But if Christianity is wrong, Christians are stuck in their wrong beliefs for the same reason.
Being epistemically stuck is a severe intellectual vice. You can tell whether you are epistemically stuck by asking the question: If you were wrong, how would you discover this? If you say, "I cannot discover this," then you are stuck. You are not stuck (or less likely to be stuck) if your answer is: If I were wrong, I would discover this by 1) Being intellectually virtuous (especially, being willing to be wrong), 2) Reading opposing viewpoints and honestly and seriously engaging in them, 3) Talking to people who think differently than I do and keeping an open mind to what they have to say.
This is why someone's material reality can have a massive impact on their worldview. In fact, I would consider material independence to be an intellectual virtue. Anything that reduces bias is an intellectual virtue, and material independence reduces bias. If your survival doesn't depend on a particular worldview, then you won't be biased to hold onto that worldview. (If giving up a worldview entails that someone would die, then don't be surprised when they never give up that worldview even when it's false.)
Christians do not engage in opposing viewpoints. They assume they are right and carry on.
While I lost the Christianity, I kept the feeling that figuring out what I believe and why is what matters most. It's true that what happens after I die is of infinite importance, because it lasts forever. So I agree with the Christian that my happiness, success, and survival for 80 years is nothing compared to my happiness, success, and survival for an infinite number of years. So the question of whether Christianity is true is of infinite importance to me. And if Christianity is not true, then it's infinitely important to me to have certainty, or as close to certainty as possible, that this is the case. Basically, I should either do everything in my power to get into heaven when I die or to prove that heaven isn't real (or to prove that a fully rational person will, in the end, not believe in heaven). This covers my existential bases, as either I get into heaven, which is infinitely good, or I prove that there was never an infinite good in the first place (and thus, if I miss out on anything, I only miss out on finite goods).
Philosophy involves reading on your own, writing on your own, thinking on your own, and generally separating yourself from those systems that threaten your intellectual virtue. The Christian separates themselves from "the world," and the philosopher separates themselves from everything. (As mentioned though, philosophy at its best is collaborative, and it's this collaboration that's essential to preventing us from becoming epistemically stuck. However, while reading involves engaging in someone else's ideas, and is in that sense socially interactive, it's still a private practice free from the tribalistic mechanisms that emerge from social groups.)
Philosophy is a strange activity, one that most humans do not engage in on any serious level. This makes perfect sense, as humans engage in those activities that do impart survival and social success, and survival and social success have little to no connection (and even a reversed connection) to the practice of philosophy.
Again, if I consider what matters to not be the things of this life, but rather what comes next, then it makes sense that I would disregard the things of this life. It's exactly this disregard for survival and social success in pursuit of truth that makes philosophers strange, even inhuman. And yet, as I noted in a previous post, Aristotle said that our rationality is what makes us so distinctly human. And it's this inhuman-human paradox that makes philosophy a superhuman activity.
Thursday, November 14, 2024
Four Problems with Kant's Ethics
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
Oliver Crisp on Closer to Truth - A sin against an infinite being is an infinite sin?
Why think our actions have this kind of connection where the magnitude of the evil depends on the kind of creature you're sinning against? Is killing a baby not as bad as killing its parent because the baby is a lesser creature and the parent is a greater creature?
And yet if anything our intuitions say preying on the powerless is the greater evil. So far from sinning against a greater being resulting in a greater sin, we might think sinning against a lesser being involves the added evil of abusing one's power or of taking advantage of someone's weakness.
Also, people, when they sin, wrong someone here on Earth. Their intentions of harm are directed at other humans or animals (or at themselves). So how is God meant to be wronged by these evils that aren't directed at him? God certainly can take offense to them, but why would murdering someone count as wronging God such that now the murder is infinitely bad? And what are the boundaries? Is shoplifting infinitely evil? Telling a lie so you don’t hurt someone’s feelings?
If God is infinitely offended by our sin, then doesn't that make God infinitely sensitive? Where's God's strength? If God is impassable, then God can’t be offended at all. If it’s a matter of accruing some kind of moral debt, then for the metaphor to make any sense, God is in full control to wipe away that debt. (Why would human sins brought about by the very limitations God stuck them with accrue a debt in the first place, I have no idea.) If it’s a matter of justice, then it’s a kind of justice I cannot make sense of. (If God wants justice, all he has to do is attach survival structures to virtue and truth. You might say this violates free will, but it doesn’t violate free will any more than free will is already violated, and even if it does at some point we have to ask whether free will is worth the cost.)
Why would God be so offended by something so little? If someone sins out of ignorance, then God understands the origins of that sin. So God knows how not personal that sin is. Why would God take such offense from something that's not personal?
Imagine if someone were to bump into me aggressively on the street and knock me to the ground, and say "Move idiot!" as he walks past. I could choose to be horribly offended by this, or I could guess that there's something wrong with this person and move on and shrug it off. It would be a failure of mine to care too much about why this person did what they did, or to take it personally when there is no reason to.
God, as the greatest possible being, should be very good at shrugging things off. But like Kuhn suggests, a God who takes everything way too personally is petulant. It looks quite silly for such a begrudging God to create creatures who he knows will do nothing but commit crimes of infinite magnitude.
Does it sound loving for a God to put us at such massive risk?