The Arguments for God
excerpted from the book
Atheism
The Case Against God
by George H. Smith
Prometheus Books, 1989, paper
p221
Natural theology attempts to infer the existence of a supernatural
being from natural phenomena which allegedly cannot be explained
within the context of the natural universe itself. Using facts
of nature as his starting point, the theist attempts to demonstrate
the existence of a god without recourse to faith or revelation.
Reason, it is claimed, is sufficient to establish the existence
of a god.
We have now returned to "god"
with a lower case "g." If valid, the arguments of natural
theology will verify supernaturalism in some form, but they cannot
establish the existence of a creature with the muddled and contradictory
attributes of the Christian God. The best that natural theology
can do for Christianity is to provide a foundation for rational
theism, but it cannot erase the contradictions inherent in the
Christian notion of God.
By examining natural theology, we are
looking for some evidence, however slight, for the existence of
a being that exists beyond the framework of the natural world.
In other words, having dispensed with Christianity specifically,
we are now concerned with the grounds for theistic belief in general.
Are there rational reasons for believing in the existence of any
kind of supernatural being, regardless of what its specific characteristics
may be? If the general arguments for theism collapse, atheism-in
the widest sense of the term-will be firmly established.
Natural theology has fallen into disrepute
in recent decades, although it does enjoy an occasional resurgence.
Liberal Protestants concede the invalidity of rational demonstration
for a god, but Catholics (along with some fundamentalist Protestants)
continue to defend natural theology. Catholic theology has a rigid
philosophic structure based heavily on Aquinas, and to deny the
validity of natural theological proofs would destroy this structure
at its roots.
p229
An explanation builds a conceptual bridge from the known to the
unknown, linking the unexplained to the context of one's knowledge.
A new idea must be integrated within one's conceptual hierarchy
in order to qualify as knowledge. An idea that cannot be so integrated
exists in a conceptual vacuum; it cannot be comprehended because
one lacks the conceptual framework necessary for comprehension.
The process of explanation consists essentially
of integrating a new idea or concept within the context of one's
present knowledge. Because men differ with regard to their context
and scope of knowledge, an explanation is relative to the person
seeking it. What is a satisfactory explanation for one man may
not be satisfactory for another. For example, we simplify our
language when explaining something to a child in order to compensate
for his limited sphere of knowledge. Also, a scientist may understand
an explanation that explains nothing to a layman who lacks the
required technical background. An explanation must provide understanding,
and one cannot understand something that lies beyond one's conceptual
frame of reference.
While the particulars of knowledge differ
among men, all men gain knowledge within one broad context: the
context of the natural, knowable universe. Removed from this framework,
knowledge is impossible and explanation is unintelligible.
Recall that the supernatural cannot be
grasped by man's consciousness. When the theist posits a supernatural
being, he is not merely positing the presently unknown that may
be grasped with a greater degree of knowledge. The theist is positing
the unknowable, that which is beyond man's comprehension, that
which man will never be able to understand regardless of his degree
of knowledge. Since the supernatural must remain forever outside
the context of man's knowledge, a "supernatural explanation"
is a contradiction in terms. One cannot explain the unknown with
reference to the unknowable.
The theist initially constructs a gap
between the universe and man's knowledge by claiming that the
universe requires an explanation. Then, by stipulating that this
explanation cannot be given in terms of natural (i.e., knowable)
phenomena, he proclaims that this gap can never be bridged, that
any attempt to account for the universe within the context of
man's knowledge is doomed to failure. Therefore, he argues, we
must turn to the supernatural and the unknowable.
The supernatural, however, does not build
a conceptual bridge from the unknown to the known; it sabotages
not only the bridge, but the very possibility of ever constructing
such a bridge. According to the theist, we can never link that
which requires an explanation (the universe or some natural phenomenon)
to the context of knowledge available to man. To say that god
is responsible for the universe is to say that the explanation
of the universe is unknowable to man-or, in other words, that
no explanation is possible. To posit the supernatural explains
nothing; it merely asserts the futility of explanation.
Thus the universe, for which the theist
originally demanded an explanation, is now admitted by this same
theist to be beyond man's comprehension. According to the theist,
the universe requires an explanation which man can never understand.
And this renders the universe unintelligible in the full meaning
of the term.
The atheist does not face this problem.
For the atheist, the universe-the totality of existence-is a metaphysical
primary and, as such, cannot require an explanation. The natural,
knowable universe provides the context in which all explanations
are possible, so to demand an explanation for the universe itself
is epistemologically absurd. Corliss Lamont, in The Philosophy
of Humanism, makes this point as follows:
In specific scientific explanations as
well as in ultimate philosophical questions a stage frequently
: ensues when it is profitless to keep on asking "Why?"
At such a juncture we have to say: "Things are simply constructed
this way or behave this way." The speed of light is what
it is; the law of gravitation operates as it does; and the number
of protons and electrons in each type of atom is what it is. In
none of these
instances can an intelligible answer be
given as to why .... In science as well as in philosophy, then,
we eventually hit rock-bottom in the pursuit of certain inquiries.
p236
The first-cause argument has two major variations. As used by
many theists, especially laymen, the first-cause argument serves
to defend the idea that "In the beginning God created the
heavens and the earth." Although philosophy is not sophisticated
enough to demonstrate a six-day creation-or to prove that the
omnipotent deity, apparently weary, "rested on the seventh
day from all his work which he had done"-we can, claims this
theist, at least demonstrate, philosophically, that a creation
occurred. There was a "beginning" when god caused the
universe to exist.
p236
Every existing thing has a cause, and every cause must be caused
by a prior cause, which in turn must be caused by a still prior
cause, and so on, until we reach one of two conclusions: (a) either
we have an endless chain of causes-an infinite regress, or (b)
there exists a first cause, a being that does not require a causal
explanation.
According to this argument, an infinite
regress of causes is impossible. Without a first cause, there
could be no second cause; and without a second cause, there could
be no third cause, and so on ad infinitum. We would then reach
the absurd conclusion that nothing presently exists. But since
things do exist, we must reject an infinite regress and conclude
that a first cause exists, a cause which we call "god."
...
This causal argument rests on two main
assumptions: that the universe as a whole requires a causal explanation,
and that we cannot provide an adequate explanation within the
context of the universe itself. Therefore, we must posit a transcendent
first cause, a being that transcends natural cause-effect relationships.
Since the universe is not causally self-sufficient,
we need to reach beyond the universe to account for the basic
fact of the universe: the fact that it exists. If the atheist
denies the existence of a supernatural being, how can he explain
the existence of the universe? Surely it cannot just "happen"
to exist; there must be a causal explanation.
Before we discuss the supposed mystery
of existence, it is necessary to make some preliminary remarks
concerning this argument.
(1) Even if valid, the first-cause argument
is capable only of demonstrating the existence of a mysterious
first cause in the distant past. It does not establish the present
existence of the first cause. On the basis of this argument, there
is no reason to assume that the first cause still exists-which
cuts the ground from any attempt to demonstrate the truth of theism
by this approach.
This objection alone demolishes the temporal
version of the causal argument, but it is not the only objection
that can be raised in this context. For example, this argument
cannot establish that the first cause was (or is) alive, nor can
it establish that the first cause was (or is) conscious. And an
inanimate, unconscious god is of little use to theism.
In fact, even if we were to accept this
argument, the most that it can possibly demonstrate is that something
has existed which is itself uncaused. And as one philosopher has
pointed out, "somebody believing in the eternity of atoms,
or of matter generally, could quite consistently accept the conclusion."
(2) The theist may object to this last
remark, claiming that not only must there be a first cause, but
this first cause cannot be part of the natural universe. The universe
does not explain the reason for its own existence, but a supernatural
first cause does provide us with an explanation. This transcendent
first cause, therefore, explains the previously unexplained.
Assuming for the moment that the universe
requires a causal explanation, does the positing of a first cause
provide us with that explanation? How does the concept of god
function as an explanatory concept in this instance? A supernatural
first cause, a god, supposedly caused the universe to exist. Consider
the nature of this "explanation." Does it provide one
with a conceptual grasp of the issue being considered? Does it
provide a causal explanation in any meaningful sense? No, it does
not.
To posit god as the cause of the universe
still leaves two crucial questions unanswered: What caused the
universe? How did it cause the universe? To say that a god is
responsible for the existence of the universe is vacuous without
knowledge of god's nature and the method used in creating existence.
If god is to serve as a causal explanation, we must have knowledge
of god's attributes by virtue of which he has the capacity to
create matter from nonexistence, and knowledge of the causal process
involved in creation, by virtue of which god is designated as
a cause.
If, as the theist asserts, the existence
of the universe requires a causal explanation, the positing of
a transcendent first cause or god does not provide us with this
explanation. The theist's solution consists of saying: An unknowable
being using unknowable methods "caused" the universe
to snap into existence. This, remember, is offered as an explanation,
as a rational solution to an apparent problem. This is supposed
to resolve one's intellectual doubts about the mystery of existence.
To say that god caused the universe to
exist is to argue that man can never comprehend the existence
of the universe. The theist demands a causal explanation of the
universe and then fails to provide an explanation. Even if a supernatural
being did exist, the "problem" of existence would be
as puzzling as before. After all, how did it create existence
from nonexistence? "Somehow" is not an explanation,
and "through some incomprehensible means" is a poorer
explanation still. The theist is trapped in a dilemma of his own
making-the "mystery" of existence-and he must confront
an unintelligible universe.
(3) Are the premises of the first-cause
argument true? Does the universe require a causal explanation?
In considering the causal argument as
a whole, one contradiction immediately stands out. The first premise
of this argument states that everything must have a cause, and
the conclusion asserts the existence of an uncaused supernatural
being. But if everything must have a cause, how did god become
exempt? Professor John Hospers points out the contradictory nature
of the first-cause argument:
... the causal argument is not merely
invalid but self-contradictory: the conclusion, which says that
something (God) does not have a cause, contradicts the premise,
which says that everything does have a cause...
p240
Causal explanation is possible only within the context of existence.
Nathaniel Branden writes:
Within the universe, the emergence of
new entities can be explained in terms of the actions of entities
that already exist .... All actions presuppose the existence of
entities-and all emergences of new entities presuppose the existence
of entities that caused their emergence. All causality presupposes
the existence of something that acts as a cause. To demand a cause
for all of existence is to demand a contradiction: if the cause
exists, it is part of existence; if it does not exist, it cannot
be a cause .... Causality presupposes existence, existence does
not presuppose causality ... Existence-not "God"-is
the First Cause.
This passage demonstrates that the causal
argument drops the epistemological context that gives meaning
to the concept of causality. "What caused the universe?"
is an absurd question, because before something can act as a cause,
it must first exist-i.e., it must first be part of the universe.
The universe sets the foundation for causal explanation and cannot
itself require La causal explanation.
p241
The universe, then, has always existed and always will exist.
Some theists find this difficult to accept, and they argue that
god makes the universe easier to understand. Yet, while the theist
complains of difficulty accepting the notion of an eternally existing
universe, consider his alternative. We must conceive of a supernatural,
unknowable, eternally existing being, and, moreover, we must conceive
of this being creating matter from the void of nonexistence. It
is strange that those who object to the idea of eternal matter
display little difficulty in accepting the creation of something
out of nothing. While the idea of an eternal universe may be initially
difficult for some people to assimilate, the theist's alternative
is an exercise in fantasy.
p257
The label "design argument" includes a family of arguments
which differ in details, but which share a common approach: each
attempts to infer the existence of a divine intelligence, a master
planner, from alleged evidences of planning in nature. If it can
be shown that nature exhibits design, we must conclude that nature
had a designer with intelligence and immense power. And this seems
to be an excellent candidate for a god.
The design argument has more appeal than
the cosmological proofs, probably because it seems more straightforward
and forceful at first glance. If we accept the premise that the
universe displays planning, the inference to a master designer
follows with irrefutable logic ...
Of course, the problem with any version
of the design argument is that the theist must demonstrate that
the universe displays intelligent planning.
p275
[The] identification of ethics with religion has no basis in fact,
and few theologians care to defend such a position explicitly.
It functions, instead, as a kind of underlying assumption, apparently
in the hope that if it goes unstated, it will also go unchallenged.
However, not only are religion and ethics distinct spheres, but
a theological approach to ethics, a moral theory based on divine
will, is inimical to human life and happiness- / and thus negates
the foundation of rational ethics.
p276
Abandoning the belief in god may have I very little influence
on a person's life one way or the other, and it is clear that
atheists are just as capable of moral atrocities as are theists.
And it is equally clear that atheism is no safeguard against misery,
anxiety and neurosis.
It is necessary to distinguish between
the mere belief in a supernatural agency which, theoretically
speaking, may have little psychological influence, and the belief
in a system of doctrines structured around this supernatural being
which, more often than not, claims a heavy psychological toll.
Few theists are able to disassociate their belief in god from
their other beliefs, particularly in the area of ethics. Christianity,
to take an obvious example, entails a wide range of doctrines
touching on areas crucially important to human life. The God of
Christianity is not an impersonal abstraction; he is intimately
involved in human affairs. He offers a scheme of salvation, promulgates
moral commandments, and threatens punishment for disbelievers.
Christianity is more than theistic belief; it is a way of life.
It offers a view of the universe, man's role in the universe,
and the requirements for human well-being-thereby impinging on
ethics and psychology.
If it is true that Christian doctrines
are largely harmful, then atheism is conducive to happiness insofar
as it removes definite obstacles to happiness... atheism while
not a guarantee of happiness, is capable of clearing the way for
the attainment of happiness. Rejecting the Christian view of sex,
for instance, can have dramatic psychological consequences, but
it does not insure that one will experience a rewarding sexual
relationship. Similarly, rejecting the general approach of Christianity
to moral principles can eradicate a major source of guilt and
self-doubt, but it does not insure that one will be a happy, confident
person.
To put this issue in a slightly different
way, atheism, as such, is not an answer to anything, but it provides
a general context in which answers are possible. Atheism provides
one with a clean slate, in effect, and what one does beyond this
point is entirely a matter of choice. But under no circumstances
should atheism be regarded as a cure-all or as an escape from
personal responsibility.
p278
Considered in terms of its basic approach and precepts, Christian
ethics must be condemned in its entirety. This is not to omit
the possibility that it may have some good things to say occasionally
and that it has had a constructive influence at certain times
in history (although, in most cases, the reverse has been true).
Rather, to condemn Christian ethics as a whole is to say that,
as an ethical system - i.e., as a system of principles to guide
man's choices and actions-it totally fails to accomplish what
an ethical system should accomplish. Christian ethics is based
throughout on falsehood-and this alone is sufficient to guarantee
its failure; in addition, it advocates a conception of moral principles
and their role in human existence which, by its very nature, works
contrary to man's happiness and well-being. Christian ethics is
more conducive to misery than to happiness, and it prescribes
moral principles that are more accurately described as a code
of death rather than a code of life. While ostensibly offering
man a reprieve from the suffering in life, Christian ethics, like
Christian theology, creates many of the problems that it later
offers to solve. And, like theology, Christian ethics fails miserably
in its attempt to find a solution.
Atheism
- The Case Against God
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