The Argument from Arrogance
Frequently
in debates with atheists I have come across a rhetorically powerful but
logically feeble polemical tactic, which I will hereby dub "The Argument
from Arrogance." Though it is never (to my knowledge) formalized, the
argument from arrogance basically proceeds from the premise that atheists are smarter
than Christians to the conclusion that atheism is more probable than
Christianity. It could be spelled out more precisely as follows:
1. Atheists
are more intelligent than Christians.
2. The
beliefs of people who are more intelligent are more likely to be true than the
beliefs of people who are less intelligent.
3. Atheism
is more likely to be true than Christianity.
Such an
argument would appear valid, in that the conclusion does seem to follow from
the premises. The premises, however, are dubious. Premise One might appear true
at a glance based on statistics, but those statistics derive in part from the
fact that the gospel does not discriminate against the poor or the uneducated.[1]
(In the very act of making the argument from arrogance, on the other hand, the leading
purveyors of atheism regard the unlettered and illiterate with but thinly veiled contempt.) Indeed,
given that education correlates with wealth, and given the teaching of Jesus on
the difficulty of a rich man entering the kingdom of heaven, the connection between
education and atheism could be seen as an indirect confirmation of biblical
teaching on the corrupting tendency,
at least, of wealth upon spiritual life. In other words the increased wealth, status and self-reliance
often attained through advanced education, rather than education itself, makes unbelief a stronger temptation.
Now consider
Premise Two. The typical holder of a doctorate is better educated and more
informed than a typical high school or community college grad generally, yes, but not always where it
counts in particular issues like this. A professor with a PhD in physics from
MIT, for example, may well have considerably less understanding of theology or ancient Near Eastern history than
a new pastor fresh out of Podunk Bible School, or even less than a devoted but
uneducated Christian with a desire to learn and an Internet connection. Meanwhile
most of us are aware that some highly educated people hold some really bizarre
beliefs (Ted Kaczynski would be one of many examples).
A variant of
the argument from arrogance is the argument from "chronological
snobbery," a conviction drawn from unfounded evolutionary assumptions and once
described by Owen Barfield as a belief that "intellectually,
humanity languished for countless generations in the most childish errors on
all sorts of crucial subjects, until it was redeemed by some simple scientific
dictum of the last century." Whenever
we hear rhetorical potshots at Christianity as belief in "superstitions of
Bronze Age goat herders" and the like, chronological snobbery is at work. But
a cursory review of history should be enough to debunk chronological snobbery. Every generation has believed itself to
possess an understanding of the world superior to all previous generations. On
gravitational theory, for one example of many, the philosophers of the
Enlightenment embraced Newton and dismissed Aristotle, never stopping to
consider that Newton might be wrong. Today's philosophers for the most part have
given up Newton for Einstein, often refusing, much like their predecessors, to
entertain the notion that Einstein
could be wrong.
To this last
point Christianity's staying power speaks resoundingly. While brilliant philosophies,
scientific theories and intellectual trends come and go, the truth of the
gospel remains. Or as Jesus stated it, "Heaven and earth will pass away,
but My words will by no means pass away" (Matt. 24:35).
[1] See our own BK's post, "Lower IQ's Lead to Faith in God?"
Comments
Chalk it up to intellectual superiority. ;-)
JRP