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The Existence of God. See Life’s Ultimate Questions , by Ronald Nash Chapters 12 & 13. Noetic Structure. Definition: A person’s beliefs plus the relationships among those beliefs Some beliefs serve as the basis or foundation of other beliefs The foundation beliefs are called basic beliefs
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The Existence of God See Life’s Ultimate Questions, by Ronald Nash Chapters 12 & 13
Noetic Structure • Definition: A person’s beliefs plus the relationships among those beliefs • Some beliefs serve as the basis or foundation of other beliefs • The foundation beliefs are called basic beliefs • The beliefs based on them are called non-basic beliefs • Your noetic structure is different from mine • Beliefs about your past are different from beliefs about my past • Noetic structures are not wholly different • Properly basic beliefs can be the same for two persons
Some Properly Basic Beliefs Under the appropriate circumstances, the appropriate belief is formed in us “I see a tree” “I had eggs and bacon for breakfast” “I am now at the edge of the Grand Canyon” When you have a basic belief, it makes no sense for someone to say to you, “Prove it!”
Foundationalism’sStrengths • Believing that one’s noetic structure is based upon certain foundational beliefs (properly basic beliefs) provides answers to important questions • When should a belief be eliminated from a person’s noetic structure? • When that belief is neither a properly basic belief nor a belief properly grounded on a basic belief
Foundationalism’sStrengths • How should we judge the strength of a non-basic belief? • In terms of the degree of support it receives from basic beliefs • When should an argument end? • When it arrives at properly basic beliefs
Properly Basic Beliefs and God • Christian philosopher Alvin Plantinga teaches that • Believing in God is a properly basic belief • We have a tendency to form beliefs such as • “God is speaking to me” • “God has created all this” • “God disapproves of what I’ve done” • Christian philosopher Thomas Reid -- This tendency or belief disposition may be part of the image of God in every human
A Capacity to Apprehend God’s Existence 1. Begin by trusting the basic belief-forming dispositions with which you are endowed . . . • Until reasons for revising them arise 2. If being appeared to by a pink rose in the garden yields immediately the belief “There is a pink rose,” 3. Then an encounter with God will yield the belief “God is real,” without deliberation or inference
Does God’s Existence Need to be Proved? • No. • However, an argument for God’s existence can be one of the belief-triggering conditions that results in the belief that God exists.
Consider these three arguments All students have long hair. Therefore, Smith has long hair. Necessarily true? Probably true? Smith is a student. Therefore, Smith has long hair. Necessarily true? Probably true? All students have long hair. Smith is a student.Therefore, Smith has long hair. Necessarily true? Probably true? The Leaky Buckets Analogy
The Leaky Buckets Analogy • So, it’s possible to have a probably true argument formed from individually weak arguments • And it’s possible to derive a necessarily true argument from individually invalid arguments
Four Types of Arguments for God’s Existence • Cosmological • Causation • Necessity • Teleological • Prudential • Experiential • Moral
Everything’s moving. There must be a Prime Mover. Everything’s been caused by other things. There must be a First Cause. Every being is contingent. There must be a being that is necessary. Every thing can be graded. There must be a being that is perfect. Every thing appears to have been designed. There must be a designer. Cosmological “Look at the world (cosmos), and you will see that there is a God.”
Paley: The Watch Analogy • Walking in a field, you come across a stone • “Where did this come from?” is an absurd question to ask about the stone • Walking in a field, you come across a watch • “Where did this come from?” is a reasonable question to ask about the watch
The Anthropic Principle • The universe seems to be designed in such a way as to provide • A home for humans (Gr. Anthropos) • An observation post from which humans can appreciate the grandeur of the universe • The universe is strangely amenable to rational inquiry on multiple integrated levels • The universe seems to be designed tutorially • The deep intelligibility of nature upon which science depends is the result of intelligent design Guillermo Gonzalez
Prudential • Pascal’s Wager • Mathematician and philosopher • If you were a betting person, which belief has the best odds going for it? • A. “There is a God” • B. “There is no God” • A. If correct, payoff is unlimited • B. If correct, payoff is limited • “There is a God” has the best odds
Experiential • “There is a God, because I have had an experience of God.” • Highly convincing for the one having the experience. • Not as convincing for anyone else. • Leo Tolstoy • “Life is only bearable when I am believing that God exists” • William P. Alston • If it makes sense to believe a person exists when you have had shared experiences with that person, • Then it makes sense to believe that God exists if you have had shared experiences with God • Prayers answered • Guidance given • Comfort received
Moral • There is a moral law of human nature • We didn’t invent it • We don’t totally benefit from it • We can’t escape it • We don’t keep it • This law comes from Something Behind the Universe • It is trying to communicate with us, personally • It must be a person himself Mere Christianity -C.S. Lewis
Another Moral Argument • Unknown Source • We live in a world containing • Incredible good • Malevolent evil • Mere survival benefit is as inadequate an explanation for malevolent evil as it is for incredible good • There must be an incredibly good being against which a malevolently evil being is struggling
Three Types of Arguments Against the Existence of God • The Empirical Argument • The Linguistic Argument • Evidential Arguments
The Empirical Argument The Invisible Gardener Story - Antony Flew (1950) • “Just how does what you call an invisible, intangible, eternally elusive gardener differ from an imaginary gardener or even from no gardener at all?" • "What would have to occur to constitute for you a disproof of the existence of God?"
The Linguistic Argument • A.k.a. Theological Noncognitivism --Michael Martin (also early William Alston):, “What kind of definition can we agree on which makes sense of the claim ‘There is a God?’” • “How can an immaterial being ‘speak,’ or communicate messages in any way, or, indeed, act in any way?”
Evidential Arguments • Victor Stenger: God -- The Failed Hypothesis • “Science proves that the universe is just as one would expect it to be if there were no God.” • “The laws of physics and of nature do not suggest that a divine hand played a role in creating the universe.” • Sam Harris and Richard Dawkins offer similar arguments.
The Problem of Evil • Charles Templeton • Christopher Hitchens • George H. Smith • The Problem: How can these • three statements all be true? • God is all good. • God is all powerful. • Evil exists. • Why, then, does evil exist? • “Either God isn’t all good, or God isn’t all powerful.” • “So, why should I believe in a being who either isn’t strong enough or good enough to put an end to evil?”