I. Introductory Discussion
Darwin’s dangerous idea…is really the thought that the living world
with all of its beauty and wonder, all of its marvelous and ingenious apparent
design, was not created or designed by God or anything at all like God; instead
it was produced by natural selection winnowing random genetic mutation, a
blind, unconscious, mechanical, algorithmic process, he says, which creates “Design
out of chaos without the aid of Mind”…More broadly, the idea is that mind,
intelligence, foresight, planning, and design are all latecomers in the
universe, themselves created by the unthinking process of natural selection.[1]
Plantinga: Why is
Darwin’s idea dangerous?
à Dennett: Because
if we accept it…we are forced to reconsider all our childlike and childish
ideas about God, morality, value, the meaning of life, and so on.
Plantinga: Why
so?
à Christians and other theists…reject the thought that
mind and intelligence, foresight, and planning are latecomers in the universe.
They reject this thought because they believe that God, the premier exemplar of
mind, has always existed, and has always been involved in the production and
planning of whatever else there is.[2]
Q1: Do you have
any objections or reservations about the idea of a God who is capable of
knowledge, who has aims and ends, and who can and in fact does act on what he
knows in such a way as to accomplish these aims? What philosophical problems
arise from assuming this to be the case?
Q2: Does anyone
have objections or reservations about the idea of mind existing before, and/or
independently from matter? What philosophical problems arise from assuming this
to be the case?
II. Dennett’s Argument (for why Darwin’s idea is dangerous)
(1) All life really has come about by evolution (“if you still harbor doubts about it, you’re inexcusably ignorant”)
(2) The mechanism that underlies this process is Darwinism, which includes two steps: source of genetic variability (typically random genetic mutation), and natural selection
(3) This process is not directed or guided or overseen by any intelligent agent
(1) All life really has come about by evolution (“if you still harbor doubts about it, you’re inexcusably ignorant”)
(2) The mechanism that underlies this process is Darwinism, which includes two steps: source of genetic variability (typically random genetic mutation), and natural selection
(3) This process is not directed or guided or overseen by any intelligent agent
Q3: What is this argument supposed to prove? Does it?
Plantinga: The
idea that this blind naturalistic process gave rise to language and mind,
including out artistic, moral, religious, and intellectual proclivities is at
least extremely doubtful, perhaps even preposterous.[3]
à Plantinga develops this objection in more depth in
chapter 10. I’ve also posted a link to an episode of Unbelievable? in which
Plantinga debates his so-called “Evolutionary Argument against Naturalism.”
Plantinga: Darwin’s
idea is dangerous to theism only if it is somehow attractive, only if there are good reasons for adopting it and
rejecting theism. Why does Dennett think we should accept Darwin’s dangerous
idea?[4]
à Dennett offers two lines of argument:
(1) It is possible that all the variety of the biosphere be produced by mindless natural selection (reprise of Dawkins’ argument)
(1) It is possible that all the variety of the biosphere be produced by mindless natural selection (reprise of Dawkins’ argument)
“Given certain controversial assumptions about logical possibility (for example, that it is possible that mind come to be in a mindless universe), we don’t know that Darwin’s dangerous idea is astronomically improbable.”[5]
Plantinga: Does
the theory of natural selection really show what Dennett says it does – that
every feature of the world, including mind itself “can be the product of a
blind, unforesightful, nonteleological, ultimately mechanical process of
differential reproduction over long periods of time.”[6]
à Locke says no: Locke believed it impossible in the
broadly logical sense that mind should have arisen somehow from “incogitative
matter”…[M]inds can only be produced by other minds. Or by Mind.”[7]
Plantinga endorses Locke’s view on p. 40.
Plantinga:
[N]eo-Darwinian scientific theory hasn’t shown that Locke is wrong or that God
does not exist necessarily; it hasn’t even shown that it is possible, in the
broadly logical sense, that minds rise from “pure incogitative matter”.
You don’t have to be a theist to think that there’s
something wrong with presuming that mind can come from matter, or that it
arrived so late on the scene. Atheist philosophy Thomas Nagel also thinks that
for mind to exist in the robust form that we observe today, it must have been
around in at least some nascent state from the very beginning.[8]
It is prima facie
highly implausible that life as we know it is the result of a sequence of
physical accidents together with the mechanism of natural selection. We are
expected to abandon this naïve response, not in favor of a fully worked out
physical/chemical explanation, but in favor of an alternative that is really a
schema for explanation, supported by some examples. What is lacking, to my
knowledge, is a credible argument that the story has a nonnegligible probability
of being true. There are two questions. First, given what is known about the
chemical basis of biology and genetics, what is the likelihood that
self-reproducing life forms should have come into existence spontaneously on
early earth, solely through the operation of the laws of physics and chemistry.
The second question is about the source of variation in the evolutionary
process that was set in motion once life began: In the available geological
time since the first life forms appeared on earth, what is the likelihood that,
as a result of a physical accident, a sequence of viable genetic mutations
should have occurred that was sufficient to permit natural selection to produce
the organisms that actually exist?[9]
If contemporary
research in molecular biology leaves open the possibility of legitimate doubts
about a fully mechanistic account of the origin and evolution of life,
dependent only on the laws of chemistry and physics, this can combine with the
failure of psychophysical reductionism to suggest that principles of a
different kind are also at work in the history of nature, principles of the
growth of order that are in their logical form teleological rather than
mechanistic.[10]
[W]ith regard to
evolution, the process of natural selection cannot account for the actual
history without an adequate supply of viable mutations, and I believe it
remains an open question whether this could have been provided in geological
time merely as the result of chemical accident, without the operation of some other
factors determining and restricting the forms of genetic variation.[11]
The feature that Plantinga is making an effort to highlight
here is Dennett’s claim about mind arising from naturalistic processes (see
quote above).
Q4: What do you
think is the appropriate response of scientists to the intractability of the
consciousness problem? Should it prevent them from endorsing unguided evolution
(Darwinism)? Is it possible to endorse unguided evolution while remaining
agnostic with respect to the question of consciousness?
Plantinga: Even
if it were logically possible, is it also biologically possible?
“Shall
we state of affairs is biologically possible if it is compatible with
biological laws? Or with the conjunction of biological law together with some
earlier total state of affairs?...Or should we instead think (with Dawkins) of
biological possibility as simply a matter of less than astronomical
improbability?”[12]
Plantinga: Even
granting that it is biologically possible (on any analysis above), it does not
follow that it is unguided, or that it would be biologically possible to have
happened without guidance.[13]
(2) If there is no such person as God, then, setting aside a few unlikely possibilities, natural selection is unguided; and there is no such person as God[14]
(2) If there is no such person as God, then, setting aside a few unlikely possibilities, natural selection is unguided; and there is no such person as God[14]
Plantinga: Why is belief in an anthropomorphic God (where this is taken to mean a God who is capable of knowledge, who has aims and ends, and who can and in fact does act on what he knows in such a way as to accomplish these aims) childish, or irrational, or anyway obsolete.[15]
à Dennett’s Argument against the rationality of belief
in God
(1) Traditional theistic arguments don’t work
(1) Traditional theistic arguments don’t work
(2) Rational belief in God
would require broadly scientific evidence
(3) There isn’t any other source of warrant of rationality for belief in God or for religious belief generally
(3) There isn’t any other source of warrant of rationality for belief in God or for religious belief generally
Plantinga: There aren’t good arguments for the existence of other minds or selves, of the past, or an external world and much else besides; nevertheless belief in [these things] is presumably not irrational or in any other way below epistemic par.[16]
Q5: Are things
different with belief in God? If so, why? What makes the difference?
On pp. 45-51,
Plantinga considers a series of “arguments” that takes aim against the theist’s
purported justification for religious belief.
Plantinga: “Dennett’s way of carrying
on is an insulting expression of disdain for those who do serious work in this
area.”[17]
Perhaps Dawkins and Dennett expects us to assess their
arguments within a larger context of evidence than Plantinga has so far
acknowledged, including the evidence that Christianity (popularly construed) is
false. Plantinga has politely excused himself from having to defend himself
against these charges because the version of Christianity he is championing is
one that denies a young earth account and biblical literalism. But perhaps it
is unfair of Plantinga to interpret Dawkins and Dennett as though they were
approaching the problem from the same context. Presumably, a much weaker
argument is needed to defend the evolutionary account on a robustly
literalistic interpretation of Christianity than on Plantinga’s qualified
version.
Q6: Do you think
Plantinga is being fair in his representation of the target and larger context
of Dawkins’ and Dennett’s criticisms? Is their project as ambitious as he
represents it?
Q7: What is
Plantinga so upset about? Are Dennett’s arguments an affront to the hard work
of serious philosophers and theologians? What do the arguments crafted by
serious philosophers and theologians have to do with the Christian majority, if
they don’t in fact support their beliefs via these means?
à Again, it appears that Dennett might be addressing a
different target than that which Plantinga is justly defending. Plantinga may
have effectively stopped the conversation between himself and Dawkins and
Dennett when, in that single paragraph back in chapter 1, he chose not identify
himself with the Christian majority. I feel that we are all intuitively aware
of what Dennett is objecting to, and – good philosophy or bad – recognize that
it is deserved when taken in the appropriate context. There’s no doubt that
Dennett falls short of proving the stronger case against the rationality of
theism and religious justification, but do his arguments fare any better taken
as critiques against the Christian majority? Alternatively, might the more
sophisticated defenses provided by serious philosophers and theologians extend
also to the majority, upholding their cause as well?
Dennett: [I]f you
can’t show by reason that a given proposed source of truth is in fact reliable,
then it is improper to accept the deliverances of that source.[18]
à Plantinga: “It is no part of reason to insist that there can’t be
any other source of true or warranted belief; it is perfectly in accord with
reason to suppose that there are source of truth in addition to reason.”[19]
Q8: In his book Warranted Christian Belief, Plantinga
argues that religious belief doesn’t require justification because, like
beliefs grounded in our perceptions, it is “properly basic.” What do you think
about the claim that faith is noninferentially justified, i.e., without appeal
to reason?[20]
Alston’s double
standard objection: [W]hy insist that it is irrational to accept religious
belief in the absence of an argument for the reliability of the faculty or
belief producing processes that give rise to it?...Is there anything but
arbitrariness in insisting that any alleged source of truth must justify itself
at the bar of rational intuition, perception, and memory? Perhaps we have
several different sources of
knowledge about the world, and none can be shown to be reliable using only the
others.[21]
Q9: The topic of
justification in epistemology is huge, but would anyone like to share any
initial thoughts or comments on the question of whether religious belief that
doesn’t ultimately appeal to reason is justified? Is it only arbitrariness that
leads some to insist that any alleged source of truth must justify itself at
the bar of rational intuition, perception, and memory? For example, maybe the
faculties that produce religious belief deserve to be held more suspect than
certain others for the wider disparity in the judgments it produces, as well as
the ease of tricking it or artificially reproducing the effects it treats as
evidence, etc.
Descartes performed a lot of the groundwork for contemporary
debates surrounding the subject of epistemic justification, so maybe some of
his comments on the subject would be helpful. For Descartes, the reliability of
the faculties of knowledge was a high-stake issue, reflecting back on the
nature of God, whom he believed created us. As Descartes saw things, if our
faculties were inadequate to guarantee reliable judgments when exercised
properly, then it would amount to an infringement on our free will, and God,
who made us that way, would be blameworthy for it. What, then, are we supposed
to make of our epistemic failures?
One primary strategy
that Descartes employs in his Fourth Meditation theodicy is to distinguish
between errors of the benign and vicious sorts. In brief, benign errors are
those errors in judgment that derive from what might be called “justifiably
imperfect design” (i.e., allowances to err), in that they are
conditioned upon man's finitude.[22]
This class extends over such errors as those that arise from the natural
limitations of the intellect, as well as from the soul's conjunction with the
body.[i] Vicious errors, on the other hand, are those
errors in judgment that derive from “unjustifiably imperfect design” (i.e., determinations
to err), and are conditioned upon man's infinite element, i.e., the will.[23]
[In] matters
regarding the well-being of the body, all of my senses report the truth much
more frequently than not. Also, I can almost always make use of more than one
sense to investigate the same thing; and in addition, I can use both my memory,
which connects present experiences with preceding ones, and my intellect, which
has by now examined all the causes of error.[24]
In the case of
our clearest and most careful judgments, however, this kind of explanation
would not be possible, for if such judgments were false they could not be
corrected by any clearer judgments or by means of any natural faculty. In such
cases I simply assert that it is impossible for us to be deceived. Since God is
the supreme being, he must also be supremely good and true, and it would
therefore be a contradiction that anything should be created by him which
positively tends towards falsehood...Hence this faculty must tend towards the
truth, at least when we use it correctly (that is, by assenting only to what we
clearly and distinctly perceive...).[25]
Plantinga:
“[E]volution and theism, contra Dawkins and Dennett, are compatible: this
means, as I am using the term, that there are no obvious truths such that their
conjunction with evolution and theism is inconsistent in the broadly logical
sense.”[26]
Q10: Insofar as
his arguments are built to address the question of logical consistency, is
Plantinga’s project narrow enough to successfully defend Christianity from the charges of incompatibility with science?
III. Draper’s Argument
Q11: Does
evolution constitute evidence against
theism?
Draper: Evolution
is evidence favoring naturalism over theism (evolution is more likely – at
least twice as likely, Draper argues – on naturalism than on theism, i.e.,
P(E/N) is much
greater than P(E/T)
à In chapter 10, Plantinga provides an argument along
the lines of P(E/N) is much less than P(E/T).
Plantinga:
According to classical definitions of God, which hold that theism is
noncontingent (i.e., if true, then necessarily true), and the theorems of model
logic, which hold that if possibly necessary, then necessary, Drapers argument
entails that theism is true.[27]
Let “S” be the proposition that “some relatively complex
living things did not descend from relatively simple single celled organisms
but rather were independently created by a supernatural person.”
P(E/N) is much
greater than P(E/T) if and only if (-S/N) x P(E/-S&N) is much greater than
P(-S/T) x (P(E/-S&T)[28]
IV. Why Do People Doubt Evolution?
Q12: What
accounts for the facts that only about 25% or Americans believe that human
beings have descended from ape-like ancestors and are concerned bout the
teaching of evolution in the schools and want to add something as a corrective,
etc.[29]
à Miller claims that it is their rugged and
self-reliant individualism; they aren’t going to let a bunch of pointy-headed
intellectuals tell them what to believe.[30]
Objection: But
it’s not that American’s aren’t believing anyone at all, which of course is
what robust self-reliant individualism would entail. I recently posted an article
to this effect on the group’s wall.
Q13: Plantinga
says that the association of evolution with naturalism is the obvious root of
the widespread antipathy to evolution in the United States, and to the teaching
of evolution in the public schools.[31]
Do you agree with this assessment?
Quote on p. 57 about the harm done to science. (See question
below)
V. Kitcher’s “Enlightenment Case”
Kitcher: [T]hose
evangelicals that rally behind intelligent design “appreciate that the
Darwinian picture of life (which goes well beyond current evolutionary science)
is at odds with a particular kind of religion, providentialist religion.”
Providentialist religion is the idea that God “cares for his creatures” and
“observes the fall of every sparrow and is especially concerned with humanity.”[32]
Plantinga: Exactly
what problem…does evolutionary theory pose for providentialist religion?
à Plantinga:
There is nothing in Christian thought to suggest that God created animals in
order that human beings might come to be, or that the only value of nonhuman
animals lies in their relation to humans.[34]
Q14: On the
interpretation of Christianity that Plantinga is endorsing, i.e., Christianity
as compatible with evolutionary theory (in which humans, or creatures very much
like humans, are understood as the intended goal of the evolutionary process), is
this statement true? Is Plantinga trying to have his cake and eat it too?
Plantinga’s Theodicy:
(1) God
wanted to create a really good world; among all the possible worlds, he wanted
to choose one of very great goodness.
(2) But
what sorts of properties make for a good world? What are the good-making
properties for worlds? Many and various: containing rational creatures who live
together in harmony, containing happy creatures, containing creatures who know
and love God, and many more. The most important is the overwhelming display of
love and mercy of Christ’s death on the cross.
(3) Therefore,
all the best possible worlds can be expected to contain incarnation and
atonement, or at any rate atonement.
(4) But
any world that contains atonement contains also a great deal of sin and
suffering (given that the remedy is proportionate to the sickness).[35]
Q15: Does anyone
have any comments of objections to the theodicy presented above?
Q16: Why does
Plantinga say that the story of Jesus dying for our sins in the greatest story
that could be told? Do you agree with
his statement?
Plantinga:
Perhaps no theodicy we can think of is wholly satisfying. If so, that should
not occasion much surprise: our knowledge of God’s options in creating the
world is a bit limited. Suppose God does have a good reason for permitting sin
and evil, pain and suffering: why think that we would be the first to know what
it is?[36]
Q17: Do you think
the problem of evil provides a route to disproving theism, or is such a route
blocked by the finitude of our knowledge?
Q18: Plantinga
seems to admit that the theodicy that he presents might not be satisfying to
everyone. If that’s the case, then why think that he has succeeded at all in
weakening the force of Kitcher’s argument?
à
Plantinga: The real question here is whether this aspect of our world
provides believers in God with a defeater
for such belief.[37] That,
in turn, depends on the strength of the case for theism…
Q19: Why does the
question of whether the existence of evil provides a defeater for religious
belief depend on the case for theism?
Plantinga: Why do
people accept theism in the first place?[38]
à “Christians believe the Bible is trustworthy because
they believe its ultimate author is God – but they would have to be benighted
indeed if they also believed that there is such a person as God because the
Bible says so. The sources of theistic belief go much deeper. Christian
theology and current science unite in declaring that human beings display a
natural tendency to believe in God or something very much like God.”[39]
If I’ve understood him correctly, Plantinga seems to be
offering an argument in defense of Christian’s faith in the Bible along these
lines:
(1) Christians
believe the Bible is trustworthy because they believe its ultimate author is
God
(2) Christians
believe the Bible is authored by God because of more immediate religious
experiences, including their natural tendency to believe in God or something
very much like God
Q20: Granting
Plantinga’s claim that “To know in a general and confused way that God exists
is implanted in us by nature”, does this provide the foundation we need to
support/justify faith in the divine authorship of the Bible, or any of the
specific details it elaborates about God?
Q21: Granting
that the question concerning why people accept theism is still important to
establishing Plantinga’s point, why do you think people accept theism? Do you
think the case for theism thus elaborated is sufficiently strong to block the
objection that evil provides a defeater for religious belief?
The Enlightenment Case
Against Supernaturalism (ECAS) – Comprised of three arguments:
(1) The argument from evil (addressed in Plantinga’s )
(2) The argument from pluralism (addressed in Plantinga’s Warranted Christian Belief)
(3) The argument from historical biblical criticism (chapter 5)
(1) The argument from evil (addressed in Plantinga’s )
(2) The argument from pluralism (addressed in Plantinga’s Warranted Christian Belief)
(3) The argument from historical biblical criticism (chapter 5)
Plantinga: [T]he [ECAS]
isn’t really relevant; we are thinking about the bearing of evolutionary theory
on religious belief, but the [ECAS] has little to do with evolution or with
science more generally.[40]
Additional Discussion Questions (if we have time)
Let’s talk about tone.
In this chapter, Plantinga often uses sarcasm to weaken the
force of Dennett’s arguments, at some points seeming to represent him as
alarmist. Examples include:
Q22: Do you think
that Dennett’s concerns about the resistance of theists to scientific doctrines
are exaggerated or alarmist? Why or why not?
[1] P. 33-34.
[2] P. 34.
[3] P. 37.
[4] P. 38-39.
[5] P. 42-43.
[6] P. 39.
[7] P. 39.
[8] “My guiding conviction is that mind is not just an
afterthought or an accident or an add-on, but a basic aspect of nature” (Mind and Cosmos, 16).
[9] Mind and Cosmos,
6.
[10] Ibid., 7.
[11] Ibid., 9.
[12] P. 41.
[13] P. 41.
[14] P. 43.
[15] P. 43.
[16] P. 45.
[17] P. 47.
[18] P. 49.
[19] P. 49.
[20] Plantinga provides a more elaborate defense of the
justification of religious belief in his book “Warranted Christian Belief.”
[21] P. 50-51.
[22] Lex Newman, “The Fourth Meditation,” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Vol. 59, No. 3 (Sept., 1999),
562.
[23] CSM II, 39-40.
[24] CSM II, 102-103.
[25] CSM II, 102-103.
[26] P. 51.
[27] P. 52.
[28] P. 53.
[29] P. 55.
[30] P. 55.
[31] P. 56.
[33] P. 59.
[34] P. 60.
[35] P. 61.
[36] P. 62.
[37] The subject of defeaters is covered in more detail in
chapter 6.
[38] P. 62.
[39] P. 62-63.
[40] P. 65.
[41] P. 37.
[i] Intellectual imperfection consists in man's limited
access to empirical data (CSM II, 39) while sensory and
appetitive imperfection consists in dispositions of the body (ibid., 56,
58-61).
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