Isn't the evidence from scientific and philosophical
enquiry mounting against the possibility of a God?
Two quick sources
1) Listen to John Blanchard's 30 minute audio talk, "Is God real?"
here.
2) In the last few decades astrophysicists have remarked that it seemed 'the
universe knew we were coming.' To quote Fred Hoyle, the all time greatest
astronomer, 'some super-intellect has monkeyed with physics'. Amazingly, more
and more universal physical constants have been discovered that, if even
minutely changed, would have made life on earth impossible. This is called the
anthropic principle. Though it does not conclusively prove the existence of God,
it certainly makes it easier to believe.
See more.
Responding to the God delusion
One of the most popular proponents of this question is Richard Dawkins in his
best seller, 'The God Delusion.' We include three responses to
Dawkin's attack on the intellectual credibility of belief in the existence of
God...
1) A Time magazine debate (of sorts) between Dawkins and Francis Collins, the
scientist who headed up the Human Genome Project.
Click here.
2) An audio link to the acclaimed Alistair MacGrath's lecture in response to the
book
here.
3) A response by, Alvin Plantinga (Professor of Philosophy at the University of
Notre Dame) which follows...
Dawkins: Naturalism ad absurdum
Introduction
The God of the Old Testament is arguably the most unpleasant character in all of
fiction. Jealous and proud of it; a petty, unjust unforgiving control-freak; a
vindictive, bloodthirsty ethnic-cleanser; a misogynistic homophobic racist,
infanticidal, genocidal, filicidal, pestilential, megalomaniacal..
Well, no need to finish the quotation; you get the idea. Richard Dawkins is not
pleased with God.
The God Delusion is an extended diatribe against religion in general and belief
in God in particular; Dawkins and Daniel Dennett (whose recent book Breaking the
Spell is his contribution to this genre) are the touchdown twins of current
academic atheism.1 Dawkins has written his book, he says, partly to encourage
timid atheists to come out of the closet. He and Dennett both appear to think it
requires considerable courage to attack religion these days; says Dennett, "I
risk a fist to the face or worse. Yet I persist."
Dawkins is perhaps the world's most popular science writer; he is also an
extremely gifted one at that. (For example, his account of bats and their ways
in his earlier book The Blind Watchmaker is a brilliant and fascinating tour de
force.) The God Delusion, however, contains little science; it is mainly
philosophy and theology (perhaps "atheology" would be a better term) and
evolutionary psychology, along with a substantial dash of social commentary
decrying religion and its allegedly harmful effects. As the above quotation
suggests, one shouldn't look to this book for even-handed and thoughtful
commentary. In fact the proportion of insult, ridicule and mockery is
astounding. (Could it be that his mother, while carrying him, was frightened by
an Anglican clergyman on the rampage?)
Now despite the fact that this book is mainly philosophy, Dawkins is not a
philosopher (he's a biologist). Even taking this into account, however, you
might say that some of his forays into philosophy are at best sophomoric, but
that would be unfair to sophomores; the fact is (grade inflation aside), many of
his arguments would receive a failing grade in a sophomore philosophy class.
This, combined with the arrogant, smarter-than-thou tone of the book, can be
annoying. I shall put irritation aside, however and do my best to take Dawkins'
main argument seriously.
Dawkins' central argument: the Improbability of God
Chapter 3 in the book, The God Delusion, is entitled, "Why There Almost
Certainly is No God". It is the heart of the book. So, why does Dawkins think
there almost certainly isn't any such person as God? It's because, he says, the
existence of God is monumentally improbable. How improbable? The astronomer Fred
Hoyle famously claimed that the probability of life arising on earth (by purely
natural means, without special divine aid) is less than the probability that a
flight-worthy Boeing 747 should be assembled by a hurricane roaring through a
junkyard. Dawkins appears to think the probability of the existence of God is in
that same neighborhood - so small as to be negligible for all practical (and
most impractical) purposes. Why does he think so?
Here Dawkins doesn't appeal to the usual anti-theistic arguments - the argument
from evil, for example, or the claim that it's impossible that there be a being
with the attributes believers ascribe to God.2 So why does he think theism is
enormously improbable? The answer: if there were such a person as God, he would
have to be enormously complex, and the more complex something is, the less
probable it is: "However statistically improbable the entity you seek to explain
by invoking a designer, the designer himself has got to be at least as
improbable. God is the Ultimate Boeing 747." The basic idea is that anything
that knows and can do what God knows and can do would have to be incredibly
complex. In particular, anything that can create or design something must be at
least as complex as the thing it can design or create. Putting it another way,
Dawkins says a designer must contain at least as much information as what it
creates or designs, and information is inversely related to probability.
Therefore, he thinks, God would have to be monumentally complex, hence
astronomically improbable; thus it is almost certain that God does not exist.
Does evolution really disprove the existence of God?
Why does Dawkins think God is complex? And why does he think that the more
complex something is, the less probable it is? Before looking more closely into
his reasoning, I'd like to digress for a moment; this claim of improbability can
help us understand something otherwise very perplexing about Dawkins' argument
in his earlier and influential book, The Blind Watchmaker. There he argues that
the scientific theory of evolution shows that our world has not been designed-by
God or anyone else. This thought is trumpeted by the subtitle of the book: Why
the Evidence of Evolution Reveals a Universe without Design.
How so? Suppose the evidence of evolution suggests that all living creatures
have evolved from some elementary form of life: how does that show that the
universe is without design? Well, if the universe has not been designed, then
the process of evolution is unguided, unorchestrated, by any intelligent being;
it is, as Dawkins suggests, blind. So his claim is that the evidence of
evolution reveals that evolution is unplanned, unguided, unorchestrated by any
intelligent being.
But how could the evidence of evolution reveal a thing like that? After all,
couldn't it be that God has directed and overseen the process of evolution? What
makes Dawkins think evolution is unguided? What he does in The Blind Watchmaker,
fundamentally, is three things. First, he recounts in vivid and arresting detail
some of the fascinating anatomical details of certain living creatures and their
incredibly complex and ingenious ways of making a living; this is the sort of
thing Dawkins does best. Second, he tries to refute arguments for the conclusion
that blind, unguided evolution could not have produced certain of these wonders
of the living world - the mammalian eye, for example, or the wing. Third, he
makes suggestions as to how these and other organic systems could have developed
by unguided evolution.
Suppose he's successful with these three things: how would that show that the
universe is without design? How does the main argument go from there? His
detailed arguments are all for the conclusion that it is biologically possible
that these various organs and systems should have come to be by unguided
Darwinian mechanisms (and some of what he says here is of considerable
interest). What is truly remarkable, however, is the form of what seems to be
the main argument. The premise he argues for is something like this:
1. We know of no irrefutable objections to its being biologically possible
that all of life has come to be by way of unguided Darwinian processes;
and Dawkins supports that premise by trying to refute objections to its being
biologically possible that life has come to be that way. His conclusion,
however, is:
2. All of life has come to be by way of unguided Darwinian processes.
It's worth meditating, if only for a moment, on the striking distance, here,
between premise (1.) and conclusion (2.). The premise tells us, substantially,
that there are no irrefutable objections to its being possible that unguided
evolution has produced all of the wonders of the living world; the conclusion is
that it is true that unguided evolution has indeed produced all of those
wonders. The argument form seems to be something like
We know of no irrefutable objections to its being possible that p is true;
therefore p is true.
Philosophers sometimes propound invalid arguments (I've propounded a few
myself); few of those arguments display the truly colossal distance between
premise and conclusion sported by this one. I come into the departmental office
and announce to the chairman that the dean has just authorized a $50,000 raise
for me; naturally he wants to know why I think so. I tell him that we know of no
irrefutable objections to its being possible that the dean has done that. My
guess is he'd gently suggest that it is high time for me to retire.
Here is where that alleged massive improbability of theism is relevant. If
theism is false, then (apart from certain weird suggestions we can safely
ignore) evolution is unguided. But it is extremely likely, Dawkins thinks, that
theism is false. Hence it is extremely likely that evolution is unguided-in
which case to establish it as true, he seems to think, all that is needed is to
refute those claims that it is impossible. So perhaps we can think about his
Blind Watchmaker argument as follows: he is really employing as an additional if
unexpressed premise his idea that the existence of God is enormously unlikely.
If so, then the argument doesn't seem quite so magnificently invalid. (It is
still invalid, however, even if not quite so magnificently - you can't establish
something as a fact by showing that objections to its possibility fail, and
adding that it is very probable.)
Is complexity really a measure of improbability?
Now suppose we return to Dawkins' argument for the claim that theism is
monumentally improbable. As you recall, the reason Dawkins gives is that God
would have to be enormously complex, and hence enormously improbable ("God, or
any intelligent, decision-making calculating agent, is complex, which is another
way of saying improbable"). What can be said for this argument?
Not much. First, is God complex? According to much classical theology (Thomas
Aquinas, for example) God is simple, and simple in a very strong sense, so that
in him there is no distinction of thing and property, actuality and
potentiality, essence and existence, and the like. Some of the discussions of
divine simplicity get pretty complicated, not to say arcane.3 (It isn't only
Catholic theology that declares God simple; according to the Belgic Confession,
a splendid expression of Reformed Christianity, God is "a single and simple
spiritual being.") So first, according to classical theology, God is simple, not
complex.4 More remarkable, perhaps, is that according to Dawkins' own definition
of complexity, God is not complex. According to his definition (set out in The
Blind Watchmaker), something is complex if it has parts that are "arranged in a
way that is unlikely to have arisen by chance alone." But of course God is a
spirit, not a material object at all, and hence has no parts.5 A fortiori (as
philosophers like to say) God doesn't have parts arranged in ways unlikely to
have arisen by chance. Therefore, given the definition of complexity Dawkins
himself proposes, God is not complex.
So first, it is far from obvious that God is complex. But second, suppose we
concede, at least for purposes of argument, that God is complex. Perhaps we
think the more a being knows, the more complex it is; God, being omniscient,
would then be highly complex. Perhaps so; still, why does Dawkins think it
follows that God would be improbable? Given materialism and the idea that the
ultimate objects in our universe are the elementary particles of physics,
perhaps a being that knew a great deal would be improbable-how could those
particles get arranged in such a way as to constitute a being with all that
knowledge? Of course we aren't given materialism. Dawkins is arguing that theism
is improbable; it would be dialectically deficient in excelsis to argue this by
appealing to materialism as a premise. Of course it is unlikely that there is
such a person as God if materialism is true; in fact materialism logically
entails that there is no such person as God; but it would be obviously
question-begging to argue that theism is improbable because materialism is true.
So why think God improbable? According to classical theism, God is a necessary
being; it is not so much as possible that there should be no such person as God;
he exists in all possible worlds. But if God is a necessary being, if he exists
in all possible worlds, then the probability that he exists, of course, is 1,
and the probability that he does not exist is 0. Far from being improbable that
he exists, his existence is maximally probable. So if Dawkins proposes that
God's existence is improbable, he owes us an argument for the conclusion that
there is no necessary being with the attributes of God-an argument that doesn't
just start from the premise that materialism is true. Neither he nor anyone else
has provided even a decent argument along these lines; Dawkins doesn't even seem
to be aware that he needs an argument of that sort.
It's less improbable that there is a God than that there is no God
A second example of Dawkinsian-style argument. Recently a number of thinkers
have proposed a new version of the argument from design, the so-called
"Fine-Tuning Argument." Starting in the late Sixties and early Seventies,
astrophysicists and others noted that several of the basic physical constants
must fall within very narrow limits if there is to be the development of
intelligent life - at any rate in a way anything like the way in which we think
it actually happened. For example, if the force of gravity were even slightly
stronger, all stars would be blue giants; if even slightly weaker, all would be
red dwarfs; in neither case could life have developed. The same goes for the
weak and strong nuclear forces; if either had been even slightly different,
life, at any rate life of the sort we have, could probably not have developed.
Equally interesting in this connection is the so-called flatness problem: the
existence of life also seems to depend very delicately upon the rate at which
the universe is expanding. Thus Stephen Hawking states that:
Reduction of the rate of expansion by one part in 1012 at the time when the
temperature of the Universe was 1010 K would have resulted in the Universe's
starting to recollapse when its radius was only 1/3000 of the present value and
the temperature was still 10,000 K.6
That would be much too warm for comfort. Hawking concludes that life is possible
only because the universe is expanding at just the right rate required to avoid
recollapse. At an earlier time, he observes, the fine-tuning had to be even more
remarkable:
We know that there has to have been a very close balance between the
competing effect of explosive expansion and gravitational contraction which, at
the very earliest epoch about which we can even pretend to speak (called the
Planck time, 10-43 sec. after the big bang), would have corresponded to the
incredible degree of accuracy represented by a deviation in their ratio from
unity by only one part in 10 to the sixtieth.7
One reaction to these apparent enormous coincidences is to see them as
substantiating the theistic claim that the universe has been created by a
personal God and as offering the material for a properly restrained theistic
argument - hence the fine-tuning argument.8 It's as if there are a large number
of dials that have to be tuned to within extremely narrow limits for life to be
possible in our universe. It is extremely unlikely that this should happen by
chance, but much more likely that this should happen if there is such a person
as God.
Now in response to this kind of theistic argument, Dawkins, along with others,
proposes that possibly there are very many (perhaps even infinitely many)
universes, with very many different distributions of values over the physical
constants. Given that there are so many, it is likely that some of them would
display values that are life-friendly. So if there are an enormous number of
universes displaying different sets of values of the fundamental constants, it's
not at all improbable that some of them should be "fine-tuned." But we might
wonder how likely it is that there are all these other universes, and whether
there is any real reason (apart from wanting to blunt the fine-tuning arguments)
for supposing there are any such things.9 But concede for the moment that indeed
there are many universes and that it is likely that some are fine-tuned and
life-friendly. That still leaves Dawkins with the following problem: even if
it's likely that some universes should be fine-tuned, it is still improbable
that this universe should be fine-tuned. Name our universe alpha: the odds that
alpha should be fine-tuned are exceedingly, astronomically low, even if it's
likely that some other universe is fine-tuned.
What is Dawkins' reply? He appeals to "the anthropic principle," the thought
that the only sort of universe in which we could be discussing this question is
one which is fine-tuned for life:
The anthropic answer, in its most general form, is that we could only be
discussing the question in the kind of universe that was capable of producing
us. Our existence therefore determines that the fundamental constants of physics
had to be in their respective Goldilocks [life-friendly] zones.
Well, of course our universe would have to be fine-tuned, given that we live in
it. But how does that so much as begin to explain why it is that alpha is
fine-tuned? One can't explain this by pointing out that we are indeed here -
anymore than I can "explain" the fact that God decided to create me (instead of
passing me over in favour of someone else) by pointing out that if God had not
thus decided, I wouldn't be here to raise that question. It still seems striking
that these constants should have just the values they do have; it is still
monumentally improbable, given chance, that they should have just those values;
and it is still much less improbable that they should have those values, if
there is a God who wanted a life-friendly universe.
Rebutting the 'unrebuttable refutation'
One more example of Dawkinsian thought. In The Blind Watchmaker, he considers
the claim that since the self-replicating machinery of life is required for
natural selection to work, God must have jumpstarted the whole evolutionary
process by specially creating life in the first place - by specially creating
the original replicating machinery of DNA and protein that makes natural
selection possible. Dawkins retorts as follows:
This is a transparently feeble argument, indeed it is obviously self-defeating.
Organized complexity is the thing that we are having difficulty in explaining.
Once we are allowed simply to postulate organized complexity, if only the
organized complexity of the DNA/protein replicating machine, it is relatively
easy to invoke it as a generator of yet more organized complexity. . But of
course any God capable of intelligently designing something as complex as the
DNA/protein machine must have been at least as complex and organized as that
machine itself. . To explain the origin of the DNA/protein machine by invoking a
supernatural Designer is to explain precisely nothing, for it leaves unexplained
the origin of the Designer.
In Darwin's Dangerous Idea, Daniel Dennett approvingly quotes this passage from
Dawkins and declares it an "unrebuttable refutation, as devastating today as
when Philo used it to trounce Cleanthes in Hume's Dialogues two centuries
earlier." Now here in The God Delusion Dawkins approvingly quotes Dennett
approvingly quoting Dawkins, and adds that Dennett (i.e. Dawkins) is entirely
correct.
Here there is much to say, but I'll say only a bit of it. First, suppose we land
on an alien planet orbiting a distant star and discover machine-like objects
that look and work just like tractors. Our leader says, "There must be
intelligent beings on this planet who built those tractors." A first-year
philosophy student on our expedition objects: "Hey, hold on a minute! You have
explained nothing at all! Any intelligent life that designed those tractors
would have to be at least as complex as they are." No doubt we'd tell him that a
little learning is a dangerous thing and advise him to take the next rocket ship
home and enroll in another philosophy course or two. For of course it is
perfectly sensible, in that context, to explain the existence of those tractors
in terms of intelligent life, even though (as we can concede for the moment)
that intelligent life would have to be at least as complex as the tractors. The
point is we aren't trying to give an ultimate explanation of organized
complexity, and we aren't trying to explain organized complexity in general; we
are only trying to explain one particular manifestation of it (those tractors).
And (unless you are trying to give an ultimate explanation of organized
complexity) it is perfectly proper to explain one manifestation of organized
complexity in terms of another. Similarly, in invoking God as the original
creator of life, we aren't trying to explain organized complexity in general,
but only a particular kind of it, i.e., terrestrial life. So even if (contrary
to fact, as I see it) God himself displays organized complexity, we would be
perfectly sensible in explaining the existence of terrestrial life in terms of
divine activity.
Does theism really fail to explain organized complexity?
A second point: Dawkins (and again Dennett echoes him) argues that, "The main
thing we want to explain is organized complexity." He goes on to say that, "The
one thing that makes evolution such a neat theory is that it explains how
organized complexity can arise out of primeval simplicity," and he faults theism
for being unable to explain organized complexity. Now the mind would be an
outstanding example of organized complexity, according to Dawkins, and of course
(unlike with organized complexity) it is uncontroversial that God is a being who
thinks and knows; so suppose we take Dawkins to be complaining that theism
doesn't offer an explanation of the mind. It is obvious that theists won't be
able to give an ultimate explanation of the mind, because, naturally enough,
there isn't any explanation of the existence of God. Still, how is that a point
against theism? Explanations come to an end; for theism they come to an end in
God. Of course the same goes for any other view; on any view explanations come
to an end. The materialist or physicalist, for example, doesn't have an
explanation for the existence of elementary particles: they just are. So to
claim that what we want or what we need is an ultimate explanation of the mind
is, once more, just to beg the question against theism; the theist neither wants
nor needs an ultimate explanation of personhood, or thinking, or the mind.
Naturalism's inherent 'defeater'
Toward the end of the book, Dawkins endorses a certain limited skepticism. Since
we have been cobbled together by (unguided) evolution, it is unlikely, he
thinks, that our view of the world is overall accurate; natural selection is
interested in adaptive behavior, not in true belief. But Dawkins fails to plumb
the real depths of the skeptical implications of the view that we have come to
be by way of unguided evolution. We can see this as follows. Like most
naturalists, Dawkins is a materialist about human beings: human persons are
material objects; they are not immaterial selves or souls or substances joined
to a body, and they don't contain any immaterial substance as a part. From this
point of view, our beliefs would be dependent on neurophysiology, and (no doubt)
a belief would just be a neurological structure of some complex kind. Now the
neurophysiology on which our beliefs depend will doubtless be adaptive; but why
think for a moment that the beliefs dependent on or caused by that
neurophysiology will be mostly true? Why think our cognitive faculties are
reliable?
From a theistic point of view, we'd expect that our cognitive faculties would be
(for the most part, and given certain qualifications and caveats) reliable. God
has created us in his image, and an important part of our image bearing is our
resembling him in being able to form true beliefs and achieve knowledge. But
from a naturalist point of view the thought that our cognitive faculties are
reliable (i.e. produce a preponderance of true beliefs) would be at best a naïve
hope. The naturalist can be reasonably sure that the neurophysiology underlying
belief formation is adaptive, but nothing follows about the truth of the beliefs
depending on that neurophysiology. In fact he'd have to hold that it is
unlikely, given unguided evolution, that our cognitive faculties are reliable.
It's as likely, given unguided evolution, that we live in a sort of dream world
as that we actually know something about ourselves and our world.
If this is so, the naturalist has a defeater for the natural assumption that his
cognitive faculties are reliable - a reason for rejecting that belief, for no
longer holding it. (Example of a defeater: suppose someone once told me that you
were born in Michigan and I believed her; but now I ask you, and you tell me you
were born in Brazil. That gives me a defeater for my belief that you were born
in Michigan.) And if he has a defeater for that belief, he also has a defeater
for any belief that is a product of his cognitive faculties. But of course that
would be all of his beliefs - including naturalism itself. So the naturalist has
a defeater for naturalism; naturalism, therefore, is self-defeating and cannot
be rationally believed.
The real problem here, obviously, is Dawkins' naturalism, his belief that there
is no such person as God or anyone like God. That is because naturalism implies
that evolution is unguided. So a broader conclusion is that one can't rationally
accept both naturalism and evolution; naturalism, therefore, is in conflict with
a premier doctrine of contemporary science. People like Dawkins hold that there
is a conflict between science and religion because they think there is a
conflict between evolution and theism; the truth of the matter, however, is that
the conflict is between science and naturalism, not between science and belief
in God.
Conclusion
The God Delusion is full of bluster and bombast, but it really doesn't give even
the slightest reason for thinking belief in God mistaken, let alone a
"delusion."
The naturalism that Dawkins embraces, furthermore, in addition to its intrinsic
unloveliness and its dispiriting conclusions about human beings and their place
in the universe, is in deep self-referential trouble. There is no reason to
believe it; and there is excellent reason to reject it.
Notes:
1. A third book along these lines, The End of Faith, has recently been
written by Sam Harris, and more recently still a sequel, Letter to a Christian
Nation, so perhaps we should speak of the touchdown triplets-or, given that
Harris is very much the junior partner in this enterprise (he's a grad student)
maybe the "Three Bears of Atheism"?
2. Although Dawkins does bring up (p. 54), apparently approvingly, the argument
that God can't be both omniscient and omnipotent: if he is omniscient, then he
can't change his mind, in which case there is something he can't do, so that he
isn't omnipotent.
3. See my Does God Have a Nature? Aquinas Lecture 44 (Marquette Univ. Press,
1980).
4. The distinguished Oxford philosopher (Dawkins calls him a theologian) Richard
Swinburne has proposed some sophisticated arguments for the claim that God is
simple. Dawkins mentions Swinburne's argument, but doesn't deign to come to
grips with it; instead he resorts to ridicule (pp. 110-111).
5. What about the Trinity? Just how we are to think of the Trinity is of course
not wholly clear; it is clear, however, that it is false that in addition to
each of the three persons of the Trinity, there is also another being of which
each of those persons is a part.
6. "The Anisotropy of the Universe at Large Times," in M. S. Longair, ed.,
Confrontation of Cosmological Theories with Observational Data (Springer, 2002),
p. 285.
7. John Polkinghorne, Science and Creation: The Search for Understanding (Random
House, 1989), p. 22.
8. One of the best versions of the fine-tuning argument is proposed by Robin
Collins in "A Scientific Argument for the Existence of God: The Fine-Tuning
Design Argument," in Michael J. Murray, ed., Reason for the Hope Within
(Eerdmans, 1999), pp. 47-75.
9. See my review of Daniel Dennett's Darwin's Dangerous Idea in Books & Culture,
May/June 1996.