Is God Incoherent? A Reply to Dan Barker
In
what he terms the "Freewill Argument for the Nonexistence of God"
(FANG), atheist Dan Barker contends that the very definition of the Christian
God is logically incoherent, and therefore the Christian God is nonexistent.
Like many unsound arguments atheistic and otherwise, Barker's appears fairly convincing at a glance. In this case Plato's dictum bears
repeating: "Arguments, like men, are often pretenders." The following
is the main body of Barker's argument:
The
Christian God is defined as a personal being who knows everything. According to
Christians, personal beings have free will.
In
order to have free will, you must have more than one option, each of which is
avoidable. This means that before you make a choice, there must be a period of
potential: you cannot know the future. Even if you think you can predict your
decision, if you claim to have free will, you must admit the potential (if not
the desire) to change your mind before the decision is final.
A
being who knows everything can have no state of "uncertainty." It
knows its choices in advance. This means that it has no potential to avoid its
choices, and therefore lacks free will. Since a being that lacks free will is
not a personal being, a personal being that knows everything cannot exist.
Therefore,
the Christian God cannot exist. [1]
If
we break down Barker's formulation further it goes something like
this:
(P1)
The Christian God is defined as omniscient and autonomous (having free will).
(P2) Autonomy and
omniscience are contradictory.
(P3) Contradictions do not exist.
(C) The Christian God
does not exist.
Premise
P2 appears to be an intermediate conclusion reached on the basis of two
additional supporting premises:
(i)
Autonomy means the ability to make decisions, leaving future possibilities
open.
(ii)
Omniscience means knowing the future beforehand, precluding ability to make
decisions.
(c) Autonomy and
omniscience are contradictory.
The
argument is admittedly valid. That is, the overall conclusion does appear to
follow logically from the premises and sub-premises. But is it sound, or
necessarily true? To answer that question, we must examine the premises
individually. P1 turns out to be basically what I would term a
"zero-sum" definition of God, in which his "omni"
characteristics (in this case omniscience) are held to be self-contradictory
because they are all-consuming. "God is defined as a personal being who
knows everything." Barker's "definition" sounds reasonable
enough, but his particularistic interpretation is not supported by Christian
theology, by biblical hermeneutics or even by most standard English
dictionaries. Thus Barker's definitions of God and omniscience appear arbitrary,
perhaps chosen in order to support a presupposed conclusion. Theologically, the
concept of God is a transcendent personal being (an eternal personality, for lack of a better word)
who possesses or exhibits attributes
such as omniscience. Personalities cannot be ontologically reduced to
definitions of their descriptive attributes.
This
appears to be one reason atheists often clamor for a "definition" of
God – in order to play verbal games with the particular words chosen to define
him. Concepts do not perfectly convey definitions; to the contrary, definitions
imperfectly convey concepts. To misunderstand this is to reduce substantive
reasoning to quibbling, and lend credence to logical fallacies such as
equivocation. For example, a debater on alt.atheism (many years ago now) argued
along these lines: "Omnipotence means all power; but if God has all power,
then humanity has none, and therefore God is directly responsible for all the
evil and suffering in the world." Here "omnipotence" does mean
"all power," but not in a zero-sum sense. "All power," at
least in theological terms, means unlimited capacity on the part of God to do
whatever he chooses. The former definition precludes free will. The latter does
not. God is described by theologians as "omniscient" because he is
said to have knowledge of what is ordinarily quite beyond the reach of human
understanding – things like the motives of his followers and the respective
geopolitical futures of the nations. Terms like "omniscience" thus
serve the purpose of theology by contributing to our understanding of God as
revealed in Scripture, but implicit in the understanding is that God is not
shackled by definitions of words coined in order to describe him in the first
place.
Consider
a counterexample: Dan Barker refers to himself as an "atheist." My
old desk dictionary, Merriam-Webster's Tenth
Collegiate, defines an "atheist" as "one who denies the
existence of God." That same dictionary then offers this definition of
"deny": "5: to refuse to accept the existence, truth, or
validity of." So it could be argued that according to a dictionary
definition, an atheist is one who simply refuses to accept the existence of God
or the truth of his existence. It gets worse. My dictionary also defines
"denial" in these terms: "6: a psychological defense mechanism
in which confrontation with a personal problem or with reality is avoided by
denying the existence of the problem or reality." By carefully selecting
the definitions of the words used to define an "atheist," I
can prove that Dan Barker's "atheism" is really a psychological
defense mechanism by which he avoids confrontation with the reality of God's
existence.
Barker
argues in premise (ii): "A being who knows everything... knows its choices
in advance." I would answer that Barker's premise is both irrelevant and
invalid: First, if free will is really the ability to make decisions, then it cannot rightly be debunked on the grounds that decisions themselves delimit free
will. As a bachelor, for instance, I considered myself "free" to
choose a bride, but now that I have made my choice I have freely renounced all
other choices. My decision here is no violation of free will, but is rather the
very consequence of it that gives it meaning according to Barker's own
definition. God likewise makes meaningful choices precisely because He is free
to do so. Second, the assertion that an omniscient being "knows its
choices in advance" is a straw man, because God is said in Scripture to
inhabit eternity, not time. An omniscient being (particularly the God of
Scripture) would not subsist in the space-time continuum of the physical
universe, subject to the constraints of time and entropy, but rather outside it
as its creator. Christian theism involves belief in a transcendent God, the
very sort of entity physicists such as Stephen Hawking must at least consider
when they speculate what could possibly cause, or at least explain, the birth of space and time at
the point of the big bang singularity. God does not know His own future because
He has no future. Because Barker's theological construction is itself
incoherent, his argument collapses.
On
the other hand, if verbal constructs can be said to have legitimate existential
import then there are some powerful arguments available for the existence of
God. Most famous of these is Anselm's ontological proof, more coherent than
Barker's FANG and in more sophisticated forms enjoying the endorsement of noted
logicians such as Alvin Plantinga, Kurt Godel and Charles Hartshorne. Anselm's
original version from the Proslogion
goes as follows:
[I]t
is quite conceivable that there is something whose non-existence is
inconceivable, and this must be greater than that whose non-existence is
conceivable. Wherefore, if that thing than which no greater thing is conceivable can be
conceived as non-existent; then, that very thing than which a greater is
inconceivable is not that than which a greater is inconceivable; which is a
contradiction.
So true it is that
there exists something than which a greater is inconceivable, that its
non-existence is inconceivable; this thing art Thou, O Lord our God! [2]
That
is, to properly conceive of God (as the greatest conceivable being or
necessarily existent being) is to logically ascertain that His non-existence is inconceivable. If valid
ontological proofs (or disproofs) are conclusive, as Barker seems to believe,
then God is not incoherent but necessarily existent. If such proofs are not
conclusive, then Barker's FANG argument proves nothing anyway.
[1] Dan Barker, "The
Freewill Argument for the Nonexistence of God," Freedom from Religion Foundation, https://ffrf.org/legacy/about/bybarker/fang.php.
[2] Anselm, "Proslogion III," cited
in Henry Bettenson and Chris Maunder, eds., Documents
of the Christian Church, New York, Oxford: 2011, p. 145.
Comments
Against Theological Fatalism
Speaking of excellent analyses: I had a chance to listen to your guest spot on the Theopologetics podcast, and I thought you did really well explaining, among other things, why Christians who provide prima facie evidence no longer bear "the" burden of proof in debates with unbelievers.