Your Brother Daniel
For more great blogs as
this one go to Daniel’s blog site at: www.Mannsword.blogspot.com
Certainty of the non-Existence of God
Louise Antony, a
professor of philosophy at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, stated
in a NYT interview:
· I claim to know that God doesn’t exist… the
question has been settled to my satisfaction. I say “there is no God” with the
same confidence I say “there are no ghosts” or “there is no magic.” The main
issue is supernaturalism — I deny that there are beings or phenomena outside
the scope of natural law.
Antony makes an
unusually strong claim about a realm that she admits transcends her direct
experiences and perceptions. Upon what then does she base such dogmatism? She
claims that the very evident presence of evil in this world has dealt a
knock-out blow to the idea of an “omnipotent and benevolent” God:
· I find the “argument from evil” overwhelming —
that is, I think the probability that the world we experience was designed by
an omnipotent and benevolent being is a zillion times lower than that it is the
product of mindless natural laws acting on mindless matter.
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/02/25/arguments-against-god/?_php=true&_type=blogs&emc=eta1&_r=0
Antony didn’t attempt to
explain how the presence of evil
argues so definitively against such a God. Nevertheless, there are several
problems inherent in this statement alone.
For one thing, an
atheist has no logical right to make use of an absolute moral concept like
evil. By denying God, the necessary basis
for all unchanging, authoritative moral truth, she also denies the existence of
evil. Hence, Antony uses what can only come from God (the concept of objective
evil) to disprove God. However, by denying God, she can only make a subjective
statement:
· “This feels
like evil to me, and I don’t feel
that a benevolent and omniscient God would conduct himself that way.”
While this modest
statement would be permissible, Antony lacks the grounds to use her sentiment
as an objective argument against God’s existence.
There is also an
unwarranted assumption - “Such a God could not possibly have a good reason to
allow evil and suffering” - buried within Antony’s claim.
However, can we rule out
such a God because He fails to conform to the way we would do/create things?
Such a judgment would be both arrogant-to-the-max and absurd. It would be like
saying:
· “God, I tripped and fell and broke my leg. This
wouldn’t have happened if you hadn’t created gravity. I know better than you
how things should have been created,” or “We age and die, and that stinks. If
you knew what you were doing, you could have made us so that we wouldn’t die.”
Such statements suggest
that we possess a greater knowledge than we do. Actually, we live in a world of
profound mysteries.
Perhaps instead, as many
have asserted, we need hardships, and that an easy life brings out the worst in
us. Besides, despite the evil and suffering, most of us cling to life. I think
that says something in favor of its Designer and the goodness of His creation.
No comments:
Post a Comment