Is Belief a Function of Evidence?
"A wise
man," the great Enlightenment philosopher David Hume asserted famously,
"proportions his belief to the evidence." Hume, readers may recall, was
one of the leading spokesmen for the empiricists,
those skeptical, science-minded types who maintained against their rationalist counterparts that a belief
is justified only when founded firmly upon evidence borne of experience. Hume's
modern-day disciples appear no less committed to that belief (though it's never
been clear just what the evidence is
that is supposed to justify it). In an age given to the glorification of
natural science and its technological outgrowths, this sort of
evidentialism-empiricism does hold a certain appeal as the outlook shared by most
scientists and other professing intellectuals. Moreover, it has become the
weapon of choice for atheists in arguments against Christian theism. Richard
Carrier for example says:
So
the supposed evidence that Christians try to offer for God's existence,
creative activity, or goodness simply doesn't cut it. It turns out not to be
evidence, but theories about otherwise ambiguous evidence, theories that
themselves remain unproven, and often barely plausible when compared with more
obvious alternatives that more readily explain the full range of evidence we
have. Therefore, the Christian theory has insufficient support to justify
believing it.[1]
Carrier is
clearly overstating his case.[2]
Yet it may come as a surprise to some that for many instances of belief, Christians
like me would actually tend to agree with the empiricists. If someone were to
tell me they have seen Bigfoot, for example, or a ghost, or an amputee restored
to wholeness upon the utterance of an evangelist's prayer, I would not simply believe the claim without further substantiation
of some kind. I would want to know answers to questions like, "Did other
people see this, and if so, what kind of people are they?", or, "Was
this sighting recorded or documented anywhere?", or "Are there any accessible
sources of trace evidence for the event?" I'm sure Hume would approve of this
cautious withholding of belief.
Hume's point
about "proportion" is also well taken. Evidence increases the
probability that a given hypothesis is true, and thereby strengthens belief in
that hypothesis accordingly. It seems to follow that among rational thinkers
belief grows stronger with the accumulation of supporting evidence; and
conversely, belief weakens with the failure of evidence to support it.
Philosophers often employ Bayes' theorem to express this positive relationship
between belief and evidence in mathematical terms.
On the other
hand, there seem to be limitations to how far Hume's empirical principle should
extend. For starters, it's not always easy to say just what constitutes
"evidence" in the first place. Evidence has been defined in terms of sense
data, physical objects like documents and inscriptions, widely accepted true propositions,
and even beliefs simply held with psychological certainty. Thomas Kelly
observes:
Both
in and outside of philosophy, the concept of evidence has often been called
upon to fill a number of distinct roles. Although some of these roles are
complementary, others stand in at least some measure of tension with one
another. Indeed, as we will see below, it is far from obvious that any one
thing could play all of the diverse roles that evidence has at various times
been expected to play.[3]
Evidence usually
plays a significant role in supporting hypotheses; but this implies that at
some point hypotheses have been proposed. Data by themselves have precious
little to say. Apart from a hypothetical context put in place by the human
imagination, potential sources of evidence like orbital motion, continental
drift, interference patterns of light, specified complexity, the empty tomb of
Jesus, the conversion of Saul of Tarsus, or even a smoking gun, would not have
the power to suggest, let alone confirm, the truth of a hypothesis. In a sense,
the "belief" that leads to the proposal of the hypothesis must
precede its confirmation.
And the fact
that many of our most basic, foundational beliefs (in the reality of the external
world, say, or the veracity of logical axioms, or the reliability of our senses)
cannot be confirmed by any form of evidence suggests, again, that there are
limitations to how much epistemic work evidence can actually perform. Perhaps
we have been designed to believe. Confirmation
bias, meanwhile, appears to be a universal psychological tendency among humans –
scientists included – which indicates that human beliefs are often impervious
to evidence. Important as evidence is, clearly other factors drive our beliefs.[4]
One of these
factors is desire. As it's often said, "We believe what we want to
believe." The fact is, even if it's true that we can't always choose
whether to believe in a given proposition or worldview, we do generally choose
what we want to believe. We strongly
tend to feed those beliefs we want to affirm, and starve the beliefs we would
rather repudiate. Thus an atheist who says he would really like to believe in
God, but spends all his time on message boards and blogs arguing against that
belief at every opportunity, is not being entirely honest. The same could be
said of a Christian who complains that his faith is weak and he just can't help
it, but spends little or no time in prayer or meditating on the words of
Scripture. For all of us, belief has a way of aligning itself with the heart's desire and picking up where evidence leaves off. Or as Hebrews says it,
"Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not
seen" (Heb. 11:1).
[1] Richard Carrier,
"Why I Am Not a Christian," The
Secular Web (2006), https://infidels.org/library/modern/richard_carrier/whynotchristian.html#noevidence.
Curiously, Carrier then adds, "And this would be so even if Christianity
was true. For even if it is true, we still
don't have enough evidence to know it
is true." Is he hedging his bets here?
[2] For a couple of articles
among many on this blog addressing evidence for Christianity, see my recent "Shreds
of Evidence," http://christiancadre.blogspot.com/2017/04/shreds-of-evidence.html,
or, "Evidence of Openness," http://christiancadre.blogspot.com/2016/02/evidence-of-openness_13.html.
[3] Thomas Kelly, "Evidence," Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(July 28, 2014), https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/evidence/.
[4] See for example Karl
Albrecht, "The Real Reason We Believe What We Believe," Psychology Today (April 21, 2014), https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/brainsnacks/201404/the-real-reason-we-believe-what-we-believe.
Comments
That does not surprise me at all. Generally, we are skeptical of all claims that are presented to us until we get the evidence. If a guy claims to have been abducted by aliens, I am sure Christians will be just as dubsious as atheists.
Religion seems to slip past that skepticism, I think because people get told it is true as children, when our skepticism is poorly developed. Once it is there, it seems to stick, even if you have doubts and become an atheist, some people do still come back to religion - and it is nearly always the religion they were brought up with (there are exceptions of course).
Pix
For me it is a real big deal that I started feeling this presence when I pray. Others think this is silly emotionalism it's unreliable yada yada yada so I have these studies that associate that feeling with transfomartive power that means nothing to you. I can see how it proves or virtually proves God is real.It doesn't really but it basically makes it very likely, that is not important to you because it's not what you value as evidence.
May your personal bar is set purposely so that you know 'god want meet it, I don't know. I do know I used to think if there was a God he would never let me feel that kind of thing and it probably wasn't real any way. Then I did experience it I new it was real.Then i founds studies that tell me it is real,I already believed way before that.
As for the logic of arguments again atheists just choose not to value it. I have argued it out whit whole boards full of atheists to a point that they all had to agree they could not beat the argument,rather than admit that proved God they just decided no argument could ever prove God. So you never have to accept a level of proof because you can always dis value he proof if you don't want it.
then the bull shit that we don[t chose belief that's just propaganda, I've seen themn deckide to choose.
Those are fair points, at least at a glance. I don't think that Christianity simply bypasses skepticism, however. Christians like me are happy to face perplexing questions squarely and provide reasonable answers for most of them, and consider that even more perplexing questions confront those holding alternative worldviews. That practice pretty much defines apologetics.
I do notice that while the vast majority of us "outgrow" belief in Santa and the Easter Bunny, belief in God sticks with most of us through adulthood. Now I concede that most believers in the West are Christians (at least in name), but the mere fact that different religions predominate in different regions certainly doesn't suggest that no one of them can be true while the others are false.
Hmm. So in your view, you are not being honest if you let the evidence decide what you believe. Instead, you should just act as if you believe. That's what you see as honesty.
That's not what I was saying at all, Skeptical. Not even close. There's certainly no "evidence" that I meant to imply anything so ridiculous.
I suspect you know this, in which case your comments are not just unfounded but, well, less than honest. Lots of irony there!
Except, of course, for your own words, which I quoted. In essence, a doubtful Christian isn't being honest unless he acts the part by praying. An atheist isn't being honest unless he acts the part of someone who has no beef with religious belief. That's what you said.
"an atheist who says he would really like to believe in God, but spends all his time on message boards and blogs arguing against that belief at every opportunity, is not being entirely honest. The same could be said of a Christian who complains that his faith is weak and he just can't help it, but spends little or no time in prayer or meditating on the words of Scripture."
Here's your reading of what I said:
"a doubtful Christian isn't being honest unless he acts the part by praying. An atheist isn't being honest unless he acts the part of someone who has no beef with religious belief."
To reiterate my actual meaning: A doubtful Christian isn't being honest if he says he "can't help" his weak faith and yet does nothing to help it (like pray). An atheist may have an ongoing "beef" with religious belief, but while expressing this ongoing beef he clearly does not, despite protests to the contrary, have a sincere desire to become a religious believer.
Once again you've managed to take an absolutely awful interpretation of what I said and hold it up for ridicule – while habitually accusing the rest of us of misunderstanding you and attacking straw men.
But it's always good for a laugh at least. ;-)