This is a
concluding reflection on my series of 12 interviews with philosophers on
religion. I’m grateful to all of them for the intelligence, clarity and
honesty with which they responded to my questions, and to the readers,
who posted hundred of comments on each interview. It seemed natural to
keep to the interview format, even though I (G.G.) had no one to
interview except myself (g.g.). Taking some of the recurring views and
concerns expressed by the readers into account (there were too many to
cite individually), I’ve tried to submit myself to what I hope was the
polite but challenging voice questioning my interviewees.
G.G.: What was the point of talking to a bunch of philosophers about religious belief?
g.g.:
The immediate impetus came from the poll I cited at the beginning of
the first interview: 73 percent of philosophers said they accepted or
were inclined to atheism, while 15 percent accepted or inclined to
theism. Only around 6 percent identified themselves as agnostics. I
would have expected a good majority to identify as agnostics.
G.G.: Why did you expect that?
g.g.:
The question of whether God exists is a controversial one: there have
been, and still are, lots of smart, informed and sincere people on both
sides. So it would seem that philosophers, committed to rational
reflection on the big questions, wouldn’t be atheists (or theists)
without good reasons. But it is also obvious that the standard arguments
for and against God’s existence — first-cause arguments, the problem of
evil, etc. — have stimulated an enormous amount of debate, leading to
many complications but to no consensus. (To get a sense of contemporary
discussions on theism see the Stanford Encyclopedia’s articles on the cosmological argument and on the problem of evil.)
Given this, it seemed to me that at least a good proportion of
philosophers would be agnostics, undecided about God’s existence.
G.G.: So you wanted to talk to philosophers to see why they accepted or denied the existence of God. What did you find out?
G.G.: So you wanted to talk to philosophers to see why they accepted or denied the existence of God. What did you find out?
g.g.:
Well, the theists were pretty much as I expected. None claimed to have a
decisive argument for God’s existence; that is, an argument they
thought should convince any reasonable person. Alvin Plantinga
claimed that there are lots of “pretty good” arguments, but allowed
that they aren’t conclusive, even though they may be “as good as
philosophical arguments get”— which I take to mean that they can make it
rational to assert God’s existence, but don’t make it irrational to
deny it.
Sajjad Rizvi
suggests something similar when he says that theistic proofs “allow
believers to fit their faith in God into a rationally coherent
framework,” even though atheists may not find them rationally
compelling. But the two other theists, John Caputo (a Catholic) and Howard Wettstein (a Jew) think that arguing for God’s existence misunderstands what religion is all about.
In my experience, all this is typical of philosophers who believe in God. As Daniel Garber
noted, once upon a time believing philosophers thought they had
arguments showing that atheism was irrational. Nowadays, the most they
do is argue that it can be rational to be a theist.[...]
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