How Open is the Secular Mind?

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Why Politics Needs Religion: the Place of Religious Arguments in the Public Square.
Author: Brendan Sweetman
(IVP Academic: 2006)
Reviewer: Graham Veale

Secularism is the new orthodoxy in British politics; our politicians cannot, must not, and shall not “do God”. The Prime Minister might mention that God is important to some people; but not so important that theology could have a role in public policy. There is an unspoken assumption that the Anglican Communion has an important cultural role in England’s green and pleasant land; after all, it excels at organising bring and buy sales. Beyond that, the Church can promote any political agenda that Parliament likes. That is, when the Church dips its toe in politics it must be supporting a cause that could be approved by the secular left or right. Churchmen who oppose gay marriage or stem-cell research are dismissed as evangelical enthusiasts; in the United Kingdom we can be religious, but we must not be enthusiastic about it.

Some theorists point out that government always involves an element of coercion. So an absolute pacifist pays for aircraft carriers, an environmentalist for nuclear power stations. But democracy depends on citizens treating each other as rational decision makers; our laws are meant to be built upon consent rather than coercion. So how can we justly impose a law on individuals who passionately disagree with it? One response is to insist that laws could be agreed upon by every citizen in principle. Secularists insist this means religious motivations and doctrines should never form a basis for a law, or any public policy. The assumption is that religious belief depends on traditions, purported revelations and religious experiences. These sources of belief are unique to each religion; therefore those outside religions could never, in principle, consent to a law based solely on religious reasons.

If we use religious dogma as a source of law we are overriding the rights of those citizens who do not share our religious convictions; they cannot consent to a religious law because they could never be convinced that it is rational. Secular rationality, in contrast, appeals to reasons that everyone can agree on. No matter what else occurs, we must not impose our beliefs on others; so we must protect a democratic society from religious arguments. By excluding all religious arguments from the playing field we create room for a genuine consensus. We simply agree to base public policy on what is empirically verifiable; whatever our worldview we can surely agree on the results of science. Everyone’s rationality is respected.

John Rawls vision for political life also excludes religious arguments from the public square. Rawls notes that in a pluralist society there are competing, and irreconcilable, worldviews. Muslims, Christians, Sikhs, Marxists, Buddhists and Hindus simply cannot agree on what is best for humanity. There is little hope of building a political consensus out of these comprehensive conceptions of the good; Rawls also argues that there is little hope of settling the debate between the various religions and ideologies.  There is little hope of moral consensus;   and we need some way of regulating disputes between the various moral communities.

Rawls argues that we must draw on our culture’s liberal political tradition; after all, the liberal political tradition has principles latent within it that most communities respect. Rawls believes that freedom, equality and reasonable standards of public discourse form the basis of a rational society. The different communities should set aside their own conception of the good, and work towards a well-ordered society. A core principle of a rational, liberal society is that religious reasons will not normally have a place in political discourse. Martin Luther King’s Letter from a Birmingham Jail would be allowed, but only because King’s position can also be supported by secular arguments. We can use religion to rally the troops, but not to form strategy.

Brendan Sweetman’s  Why Politics Needs Religion is, quite correctly, suspicious of these arguments; it is more than a little coincidental that they favour an atheistic worldview. Atheistic secularism seeks something more than freedom of religion; its stated aim is freedom from religion. It recognises science as of the paradigmatic form of knowledge, and tends strongly to the view that religious beliefs cannot be rationally justified; atheists cannot consistently maintain that religious arguments are rationally compelling. So it is convenient, to say the least, that secular theorists have developed such principled reasons for excluding all religious argument for the pubic square! The atheist need not even argue for the rational superiority of his worldview. He need merely point to the fact of religious pluralism, insist that it would be unfair to privilege one view over others and claim that a consensus is unlikely. It follows that we should restrict our political arguments to empirical facts; fortuitously the secularists preferred source of knowledge.

Sweetman argues that there is no “neutral” view that can satisfy all parties; and he seems quite correct. For example an atheist and a Christian will disagree about human nature. The Christian believes that humans have a purpose, and that humans have metaphysical significance. Human nature cannot be reshaped to our preferred ends. There is a great deal of existential comfort in this worldview. Secularists can point to a common evolutionary history and a common genome; but they must confine their account of human nature to physical causes. However, they have more freedom in deciding what does or doesn’t count as moral behaviour. Sexual ethics provides an obvious point of comparison. The secularist can argue that sex may be “for” whatever we choose.  Christians approach the matter differently; it is not so much that human beings were given the gift of sex. Rather, humans were given the gift of marriage, and sex is an essential part of that gift.

In the Christian tradition, marriage is a lifelong and exclusive sexual union. This union is aimed at new life; it creates a family which can welcome the next generation into the world.  There is some common ground; the Christian and the secularist both believe that “love” is important in sexual relationships. But the atheist tends to define “love” as an emotional experience; Christian revelation defines love as a commitment to value another more than oneself. Love is a Christian virtue that shapes the whole person; it forms our personality and our emotional life. Christian love is expressed in promises and sacrifices. So a secular theorist and a Christian can agree that society should honour romantic love. But the Christian will see the covenant made in marriage as the proper end of romantic love; secularists will be just as happy with contractual relationships that should only be maintained while all parties are happy and fulfilled.

Secularists and Christians can also agree that stable procreative relationships are good for society, and should be supported by law. However the Christian demands something more than a functional unit for human reproduction; the purpose of sex is to create families, and the purpose of family is to nurture love and commitment. This basic design is written into human nature, and any attempt to re-engineer the nature of families is bound to lead to harm. Culture and law should honour the marital union of one man and one woman, as this covenant provides the source of the next generation. Secular thought is not convinced; it cannot allow talk of “design” and “purpose”. Therefore humans should feel free to honour other romantic relationships, and should not be afraid to use technology to alter human procreation.

We are left with a “zero-sum” game. If the secularist view of marriage prevails, then Christians are forced to live in a society that does not recognise their most basic commitments. As legislation is put in place to protect new “forms” of family from discrimination, Christians find that they cannot express their moral views as freely as they might expect. Education and the popular media begin to promote views that they cannot endorse. On the other side of the ledger, if the Christian view prevails, many will find that they cannot express their sexual preferences as publicly as they desire, and will at times face public censure. There are winners and losers; and if the victors claim that their gain is merely the triumph of common sense and reason, they compound the loss of the defeated side.

But the greatest strength of Sweetman’s book is his insistence that we should regard atheistic secularism as a distinct worldview with substantive content and rules of conduct; and like any other worldview it stands in need of rational justification. For many secularists atheism involves much more than the denial of theism; many atheists now strongly identify with naturalism. Naturalism is a substantive worldview. It contends that reality is composed only of forces and structures that can be described by science; it follows that the scientific method is the paradigm of rationality. It also reckons that human autonomy is the chief moral and political good; in the absence of transcendent values, humans must create their own significance. This can only be achieved when artists and authors have the freedom to express themselves.

So naturalism is a coherent set of ideas that aims to give a comprehensive account of reality, and that prescribes how we should act and live. That is all that it takes to be a worldview. But it is not at all obvious that naturalism is a rationally compelling worldview. It struggles to give an account of moral value, human significance, or even conscious experience and personal identity. Christian theism is a competing worldview (although there is much more to Christian faith than belief in a worldview). And it is crucial to realise that Christians can appeal to evidence to substantiate their worldview. Sweetman contends that that the evidence from design, moral values and contingent existence ,and the evidence from the resurrection of Jesus Christ justify Christian Theism’s core doctrines.

Of course Sweetman’s claims are hotly contested. But that is precisely his point; the debate has not been resolved in the academy, and it shows no sign of being resolved to everyone’s satisfaction. We shouldn’t conclude too much from the fact of disagreement; that’s just life in philosophy. It’s certainly a fact of life in politics – equally rational individuals of good will and integrity can come to different conclusions when faced with the same evidence. Politicians and economists disagree over the fairest form of taxation and the merits of the welfare state; they still have to decide on a course of action. It is not surprising, then, that individuals disagree about worldviews. But the key point is this – Christians need not appeal to private experiences or traditions to establish their worldview. Christianity can appeal to evidence.

So the Christian is not, in any sense, imposing a view on secularists that they could not agree to in principle. The fact is that the Christian is making a perfectly rational and legitimate interpretation of the available evidence. Sweetman allows that I can argue that the government should care for the weak and helpless because the New Testament reliably records that Jesus criticised the elites of his day for discriminating against the poor, and that the authority of Jesus has been established by the resurrection. I have not appealed to private experience or to the authority of the Bible; I have appealed to historical evidence. The secularist can argue against my interpretation – good luck to him – but he cannot accuse me of bypassing rational debate.

Again, Sweetman seems quite correct. But perhaps he could have made a little more out of the fact that every worldview appeals to subjective, private experiences to establish its arguments.After all, political rhetoric appeals to the emotions as much as the mind; public relations experts and spin doctors might tend to sophistry, but politics necessarily involves emotional appeals. The abolitionist movement worked hard on the sympathy and empathy of listeners to establish the humanity of slaves. So Christians should not be embarrassed if they have an experiential basis for their faith. And if the preacher cannot convince his audience of the truth of Christianity with rhetoric, perhaps his message can at least awaken a sense of the dignity of human life. If soundbites have a place in politics, why not homilies?

Perhaps one part of a religious vision will prove appealing to the secularist. For example, Jonathan Sacks has used the biblical concept of “covenant” to articulate a programme for building a genuinely pluralist society (“The Home We Build Together” (Continuum:2009)). His vision is inspired by the Bible, and does not appeal to public evidence. But Buddhists, Hindus and Atheists might find the project attractive.  And there is no reason why atheists cannot “preach to the converted.” For example, an atheist might claim that a consistent Christian should oppose public prayer in council meetings, as Jesus promoted the value of private prayer in Matthew 6. Sweetman might have strengthened his book a little by exploring these options.

Furthermore, while many secularists adopt a fully-fledged worldview, Sweetman overstates his case when he describes secularism as a religion. Sweetman acknowledges the difficulties with this position, but he maintains that the only difference between an atheistic worldview and a religion is that religions appeal to a supernatural, unseen realm. On this view, a religion is just a worldview with metaphysics. But this is an inadequate view of religion; though Platonism and Aristotelianism are coherent worldviews, which have inspired both passionate advocates and small academic communities, they are not religions.  Religions all believe in a metaphysical and unseen realm, but they also insist that this “unseen realm” provides the deepest answers to substantial human needs; they then form a system of communities and practices that help humans to find those answers. Atheism has no answer to this attempt to meet emotional and existential needs; it can only mimic religious services with “reason rallies” and the like.

Religions have a motivating power that secularists envy and fear; the religious are equally suspicious of atheism’s track record with religion. Revolutionary France and Russia, Mao’s Cultural Revolution and even the New Atheism’s rank intolerance give scant grounds for comfort. Yet Sweetman refuses to give in to either community’s apocalyptic expectations. While secularists foresee the collapse of science and Christians await the destruction of the family, Sweetman urges patience. In a pluralist society we must not search for quick-fix, universal rules that will settle the relationship between Church and State once and for all. Rather we should take each case on its own merits. Should Schools be permitted to begin the day with an act of Christian Worship? It is up to the pupils, the parents and the teachers to reach a fair solution for all parties. Should towns be allowed to display religious symbols on public property? It depends on the town, its religious make-up, who travels through it, who works there, and what they desire.

This encourages citizens to promote their views in a democracy, especially on the level of local politics. Learning to agree to disagree with other adults is a mark of personal maturity; Sweetman reminds us that it is also a mark of cultural maturity.  We need to include as many viewpoints as possible into public debate. We can learn from other community’s perspectives, even if we disagree with the bulk of their beliefs. It is healthy to open our own stances to public critique. Far from reopening culture wars, Sweetman is trying to defuse them. After all, if religious arguments are excluded from public debate by secularist fiat, then rational discussion is no longer an option. Religious communities and their secular critics can only engage through power-politics and demagoguery; and the public square will be impoverished as a result.

 

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There’s Probably No God – a response to Richard Dawkins

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In his best-selling book The God Delusion (TGD)[1], Richard Dawkins claims that belief in God is not only mistaken but irrational, especially in the light of modern science. He criticises belief in God from many angles, but in what he considers to be the central argument of his book, he claims to have shown that ‘God almost certainly does not exist’ (TGD, p. 158). His argument is based on probability and indeed he refers to it as the argument from improbability, which he thinks ‘demonstrates that God, though not technically disprovable, is very very improbable indeed’ (TGD, p. 109).[2] For those who believe in God, this might be somewhat disconcerting. If such a well-known and high-profile scientist makes such claims, mustn’t there be something to them even if we acknowledge that his rhetoric is a bit overblown at times? What exactly is his argument? And does it stand up to scrutiny? These questions will be the focus of this article.

The Ultimate Boeing 747

The cosmologist Fred Hoyle claimed that the probability of natural processes producing living organisms is no greater than the probability of a hurricane assembling a Boeing 747 in a scrapyard. This illustration is often used to show that just as a Boeing 747 points to a designer so too does the existence of life. Dawkins attempts to turn this argument on its head. According to his ‘argument from improbability’ God is even more complex and so he claims that God’s existence is even more improbable than a Boeing 747 coming about by chance. He puts it like this:

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.[3]

Far from improbability (of living organisms) providing evidence for God, Dawkins claims:

The argument from improbability, properly deployed, comes close to proving that God does not exist.[4]

Let’s get back to the argument itself. Although Dawkins does not state his argument in quite this way, it could be summarized as follows:[5]

1.   Complex things are very improbable if there is no explanation for their existence.(That’s why they need an explanation.)

2.   God is very complex (if he exists).

(In fact, God would be even more complex than other things we want to explain and so God would be even more in need of explanation.)

3.   There could be no explanation of God’s existence.

Therefore, God is very improbable.

Why the Argument Fails

If any one of the three premises (1-3) of the argument is false, the argument fails. Let’s consider the first one:

1.   Complex things are very improbable if there is no explanation for their existence.

Is this true? Are complexity and improbability connected in this way? Here is what Dawkins says, ‘The argument from improbability states that complex things could not have come about by chance’.[6] This seems right since, for example, it is very improbable that a Boeing 747 would come about by chance. So there is a link between complexity and improbability for things that come about by chance. But this is very different from premise 1 and it would mean that Dawkins’ argument would establish, at best, that it is very improbable that God came about by chance. But since no believers think God came about by chance anyway, they would hardly be worried by such an argument.

So Dawkins has not given us any reason for thinking that premise 1 is true. And the problem is that if there is no good reason to think that it is true then his argument fails. But let’s suppose that we are generous and grant that Dawkins is right about premise 1. Does that mean that we should accept his argument? The answer to this depends on whether premises 2 and 3 are true. Let’s consider 2:

2.   God would be extremely complex.

Is this true? Here is what Dawkins has to say,

A God capable of continuously monitoring and controlling the individual status of every particle in the universe cannot be simple.[7]

Here we must be careful about the words ‘simple’ and ‘complex’. The problem is that it is not enough for Dawkins to say that God would be complex in some sense of the word. Recall that the whole point of the argument is to link complexity with improbability so he would need to show that God is complex in the relevant sense. What kind of complexity is linked with improbability? Dawkins is very clear that it is what he calls organised complexity. Roughly speaking, an entity has organised complexity if it is composed of a variety of parts arranged in a highly specific manner so that it is able to function. So the question is not merely whether God would be complex, but whether God would have organised complexity.

Dawkins seems to think that because the capabilities of humans depend on having a complex brain God would have to have an even more complex structure since his capabilities would far exceed those of humans. He seems to think that human minds function by the interaction of the physical parts of the brain and so, if immaterial minds exist, they must similarly function in terms of the interaction of parts. But this is a mistake. In fact, the very idea of an immaterial mind is that it does not function in terms of the interaction of parts. Now, of course, Dawkins may believe that such immaterial minds do not exist, but it would clearly be begging the question to use that as part of an argument that God does not exist.[8]

So Dawkins has not given us any reason for thinking that premise 2 is true. If God exists, there is no good reason to think that he would have the kind of complexity (i.e. organised complexity) which can be linked with improbability. This is not to say that God is not complex in any sense of the word, just not in the relevant sense required for Dawkins’ argument to work.[9]

Overall then, premises 1 and 2 of Dawkins’ argument are extremely dubious and premise 3 becomes irrelevant since God does not possess the kind of complexity in question.[10] Since this is the case, there is no good reason to accept Dawkins’ conclusion that God’s existence is very improbable.

Problems with Probability

But there is a further problem for Dawkins’ argument. Let’s just pretend for a moment that Dawkins is right in having claimed to show that God’s existence is very improbable. The difficulty is we need to distinguish between the probability before all the evidence has been taken into account and the probability afterwards. If Dawkins’ argument worked, it would only establish that God’s existence is improbable before the evidence has been considered. Yet a belief can be very improbable before relevant evidence has been considered and highly probably afterwards. Consider the following illustration.

Suppose my friend Tom enters the lottery every week and that the winning numbers have just been announced in a particular week. What is the probability that Tom has hit the jackpot? Well, either he has or he hasn’t, but not knowing what numbers he selected it is very reasonable for me to assign an extremely low probability, 1 in 10,000,000 perhaps. However, the next day Tom arrives at my house, driving a new BMW, and he tells me that he hit the jackpot in the lottery the previous night. Initially, I am suspicious because Tom is a bit of a practical joker, but then he shows me a newspaper which has a picture of him receiving the cheque and later I see him on the local news on television which again confirms his story. What is the probability now? Now that all the evidence has been taken into account it is extremely high; in fact, I can be virtually certain that he hit the jackpot.

Could something similar apply in God’s case? Dawkins will claim that there is no evidence for God, but what is his reason for this? It is that God is even more complex and so more improbable than the evidence he is supposed to explain. We have already seen that there are problems with this line of reasoning, but consider Tom’s case again. It would clearly be incorrect to exclude Tom’s winning the lottery as a good explanation of the evidence just because it was very improbable to start with. Similarly, even if God’s existence were improbable to start with as Dawkins claims, this would not be a good reason for excluding God as an explanation for various pieces of evidence.

Arguably there are various features of our world which provide strong evidence for the existence of God. Consider, for example, the fine-tuning of physical constants, the order expressed in the laws of science, evidence for the beginning of the universe, the existence of conscious beings, our awareness of moral obligations and the evidence for the resurrection of Jesus. The idea is that each of these pieces of evidence is not at all the kind of evidence we would expect if God does not exist, but would be much better accounted for if there is a God. Clearly, a detailed discussion of these evidences would take us well beyond the scope of this article.[11]

Conclusion

Richard Dawkins has presented an argument which purports to demonstrate that God almost certainly does not exist. He claims that God, if he existed, would be very complex and as a consequence his existence is very improbable. This argument is seriously flawed on a number of fronts. First, his argument would at best establish that it is very improbable that God came about by chance, which no-one believes anyway. Second, there is no good reason to think that God is complex in the relevant sense. Finally, even if Dawkins were right, it may well be that God’s existence is highly probable once all the evidence is taken into account.

 


[1] Richard Dawkins, The God Delusion (London: Bantam Press, 2006).

[2] Ibid., p. 109.

[3] Ibid., p. 114.

[4] Ibid., p. 113.

[5] For a slightly different formulation of Dawkins’ argument and response to it see Patrick Richmond, ‘Richard Dawkins’ Darwinian Objection to Unexplained Complexity in God’, Science and Christian Belief, 19, (2007), 99-116. See also Keith Ward, Why There Almost Certainly is a God: Doubting Dawkins (Oxford: Lion, 2008).

[6] Richard Dawkins, The God Delusion, p. 114.

[7] Ibid., p. 149.

[8] Even if one denies that there are any immaterial minds, the idea itself doesn’t seem to be particularly mysterious. See, for example, Dallas Willard, ‘On the Texture and Substance of the Human Soul’ (www.dwillard.org/articles/artview.asp?artID=49). An immaterial mind could be understood simply as consciousness coupled with a power to make choice.

[9] In fact, Richard Swinburne has argued just the opposite, that the intrinsic probability of theism is higher than rival hypotheses because the hypothesis of theism is very simple (The Existence of God, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2nd ed., 2004, chapter 5). Roughly speaking, he thinks it is very simple because it can be stated in a very simple way in terms of a single entity, namely God, and several properties (such as knowledge and power from which other attributes follow) which are without limit. Indeed, he has claimed that theism can be characterised as ‘limitless, intentional power’.

[10] And there’s a problem with this premise in any case which presents yet another problem for Dawkins’ argument. Theists often argue that there is an explanation for God in terms of the necessity of his nature. Both theist Gregory Ganssle (‘Dawkins’s Best Argument: The Case Against God in The God Delusion’, Philosophia Christi 10 [2008], pp. 39–56) and non-theist Erik Wielenberg (‘Dawkins’s Gambit, Hume’s Aroma, and God’s Simplicity’, Philosophia Christi 11 [2009], pp. 113–128) think that this is fatal to Dawkins’ argument on its own, although not all theists believe that God’s existence is necessary.

[11] For such discussion see for example Richard Swinburne, The Existence of God; William Lane Craig, Reasonable Faith: Christian Truth and Apologetics (Wheaton, Illinois: Crossway, 3rd ed., 2008).

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