A Theodicy of Incompleteness
[The following is an excerpt from an article originally printed in Hope's Reason: A Journal of Apologetics and reprinted as the first
chapter of my book Transcending Proof.]
Like most of the great mathematical discoveries by the
great mathematicians, the famous incompleteness theorems published by Kurt
Gödel in 1931 almost completely escape the comprehension of the average man on
the street. Nonetheless, scholars familiar with the work of Gödel and his
theorems have gone to the trouble of translating his texts – not only from the
original German, but from the abstract language of logic and high-level arithmetic.
What they describe is a powerful insight with profound limiting implications
for otherwise seemingly unbounded areas of research, such as artificial
intelligence and theoretical cosmology. I suspect they also have implications
for theodicy.
Using sophisticated mathematical and logical machinery,
Gödel managed to prove with the incompleteness theorems that in most any formal
and consistent axiomatic system, there will be a true statement derivable from
the system which nonetheless cannot be proven within the system.[1] The
statement in question can be proven in principle (as it is true), through the
addition of more axioms, but this expansion results in a larger system in which
the principle of incompleteness again holds: New statements will be derivable
from the new system, which cannot be proven within the new system.
To illustrate the theorem I will take the liberty to
borrow an analogy from Rudy Rucker, that of a truth machine which houses all
known truth and can answer all questions asked of it with only true statements.[2] A truth
machine operator approaches the machine and types in the following sentence:
"The truth machine will never say that
this sentence is true."
Then the operator asks the machine if the above sentence,
as stated, is true or false. If the truth machine decides the sentence is true,
it cannot say so (because the sentence states that the truth machine will not say it is true). If the truth
machine decides the sentence is false, then again
it cannot say so (because it only answers with true statements) – yet its
failure to say so is precisely what the sentence says of the truth machine. It
is true, then, that the truth machine will never say that the sentence
is true. Though true in itself, the undecidability of the sentence for the truth machine means that its
truth cannot be recognized by that same machine.
All this implies that as outside observers, we can
somehow ascertain a truth that even a perfectly programmed truth machine
cannot. This implies in turn that we, along with this special insight that only
we can see, in some sense transcend any programmed system – even a system that
houses all known truth. How can this be? Well, for one thing we have not been
programmed. Human beings are evidently not reducible to machines, any more than
our thoughts are reducible to abstract statements derived from formal systems
of logic or mathematics. Often the undecidable statement in a proof of Gödel's
theorem is termed self-referential,
and this is telling; for what a machine lacks by its classical definition is
self-awareness. Penrose argues that with this ability to reflect human beings alone can see both sides of a paradox, whereas
a machine can only process inputs given it from outside itself.[3] In a
brilliant stroke of genius eminently logical and equally paradoxical, Gödel
managed to establish the critical distinction between God-given reason and
mechanical computation.
Technically Gödel's theorems only hold in the context of
consistent systems featuring formal language, system-specific axioms, and rules
of inference. Peano Arithmetic is thought to be the ideal such system.
Euclidean geometry is also said to suffice. But the principle appears to apply
more generally. For example, Stephen Hawking has argued that the eclipse of
classical Newtonian physics by the mutually incompatible theories of quantum
mechanics and general relativity suggests incompleteness of the physical
universe. Though mathematical models can be created which approximate the
fundamental structure of the universe, they cannot be proven in principle because
human observers are entities within the very system under observation:
But we are not angels, who view the universe
from the outside. Instead, we and our models are both part of the universe we
are describing. Thus a physical theory is self-referencing, like in Gödel's
theorem. One might therefore expect it to be either inconsistent or incomplete.
The theories we have so far are both inconsistent and incomplete.[4]
Even more so, theological explanations for evil in a
physical universe whose theories are inconsistent or incomplete should be
expected to appear similarly inconsistent or incomplete. Pressing the idea yet
further, Thomas Nagel maintains that in light of the unavoidable subjectivity
of human perceptions, "any objective conception of reality must acknowledge
its own incompleteness."[5]
A less formal but no less baffling undecidable statement
facing any theodicy project might go something like this: "God's act of
creating humans free to choose between good and evil is morally
justifiable." If we say that the sentence is true, we imply that the
freedom to choose evil is morally justifiable (though evil by definition is not
morally justifiable). If we say that the sentence is false, we imply that the
freedom to choose good is not morally justifiable (though good by
definition is morally justifiable). The former means leaving the floodgates
open to various forms of evil and its painful consequences. The latter means
closing the door to love, friendship, adventure, growth, discovery, and
personal accomplishments – in short, an absence of any meaningful experience of
good. Either situation could rightly be described as evil. Theodicy in one
sense remains woefully incomplete.
In another sense, however, the Scriptures supply a
complete and coherent solution to the problem of evil. As Eleonore Stump
suggests, certain Christian beliefs speak uniquely to the problem of evil: The
fall of Adam (and by extension all of humanity); the onset of natural evil
("a curse upon the earth") through Adam's fall; and the eternal
destination of either heaven or hell awaiting all people, depending on the
state of their relationship to God, principally through faith in Christ (or
willful lack thereof).[6] Indeed,
a thoroughly biblical Christian response to evil alone seems capable of
answering the questions still confronting us:
1. How can God create an eternal paradise,
given the priority he places on moral free will?
2. Why has God not already created an eternal paradise complete with morally free
beings, given that he has the ability to do so? (Or, why is this-worldly
existence even necessary?)
These questions really turn on one another. God can
create an eternal paradise featuring sheer moral goodness only if its
inhabitants are free to choose the good. But such a paradise requires that its
inhabitants never choose evil, which implies a restriction on freedom. Just
what is it, then, that makes it possible to retain human volition and at the
same time ensure uncorrupted goodness? Jesus preached the answer consistently:
the coming of the kingdom of God. The theology of the kingdom, especially its
eschatological and eternal aspects, depicts a gradual but final and
irreversible, i.e., complete, triumph of good over evil. As Jesus
preached it and as most New Testament scholars acknowledge, the kingdom can be
best viewed as having already arrived in one sense and yet awaiting its
complete fulfillment in another. This is the "Already-Not Yet"
paradigm, which suggests incompleteness in theology.[7]
From this perspective, the creation of the world as
described in Genesis was not the end of God's work of creation, but only the
start of a much more expansive creative-redemptive program with ultimate,
everlasting joy in view. This creative-redemptive program, as I have called it,
consists of three distinct phases. During the first phase in the paradise of
Eden, human free will was unrestricted with respect to choosing among certain
moral and relational options. Among the numerous fruit-bearing trees in the
garden were both the tree of life and the tree of the knowledge of good and
evil. Despite God's warning that death would result, Adam (following Eve) ate
of the fruit of the knowledge of good and evil; and of course to know good and
evil is to know evil, and to know evil is to experience it. Given the basic
truth of the doctrine of original sin or universal depravity, that all men have
shared significantly in the transgression of Adam, all humans have experienced
evil directly both as perpetrators and victims.
Inhabitants of a world fallen and cursed by sin, we are
now in the second phase of God’s creative program. Having partaken of the
knowledge of good and evil, we still operate with free will but with the added
"advantage," so to speak, of being better (but still not completely)
informed. Experience has taught us, i.e., Christian believers, that sin breeds
more pain than pleasure in this life, and death at the end of it. Equally we
have tasted of the forgiveness of sins, the liberating life of God in Christ,
and the comforting ministry of the Holy Spirit. For believers, then, the innate
human appetite for evil has been weakened and becomes ever weaker with our
growth in the faith. Replacing that old craving for transitory pleasure is a
desire for the eternal knowledge of God himself, the very source of all good
things. On such a view, this-worldly existence is necessary as the arena in
which eternally binding choices are made, and where evil – especially the
irrational, excruciating sort we prefer to call pointless and gratuitous –
serves as a powerful inducement to seek God rather than sin. "So things
that contribute," says Stump, "to a person's humbling, to his
awareness of his own evil, and to his unhappiness with his present state
contribute to his willing God's help." She then concludes that "moral
and natural evil make such a contribution."[8] Jesus
said simply, "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of
heaven."[9]
In a fallen world, if no other, we are able to hear, freely and clearly, the
divine call to repentance from sin and ongoing faith in Christ. Evil in that
case might not be a senseless aberration from God's creative-redemptive plan,
but an essential part of it.
Nonetheless, the third phase of God's creative-redemptive
design alone will bring about the completeness we seek. Only in the future,
final consummation of God’s plan will we realize how one can remain ever free
to love God and others but never free to become evil. Although the logical
compatibility of evil and divine benevolence, of free will and eternal blessedness,
cannot be strictly proven within the system of this world, Scripture posits its
provability in the larger transcendent system of the kingdom. In the eternal
kingdom of heaven theodicy will be completed. But of course no theodicy will be
necessary. God will wipe every tear from our eyes and every trace of evil will
have vanished away forever, not in violation of our free will, but in the
divine response to it. This may explain why there is no tree of knowledge of
good and evil in the heavenly paradise of Revelation 22 – only a tree of life.
Having already tasted the bitter fruit of the knowledge of good and evil, and
as a result having freely renounced sin and embraced eternal life in Christ by
faith, we will enter the New Jerusalem prepared to joyfully partake of the tree
of life forever. Only then and there, in the eternal kingdom of heaven, will we
experience the culmination of both genuine freedom and everlasting joy.
[1] The
idea goes something like this: For any system based on formal language L, there
will be a self-referentially true statement G coded in L such that neither G
nor not-G is provable in the system. G, then, is true but formally
undecidable. Either the system is incomplete with respect to the truth of
G, or the system is inconsistent (consistency here means that in principle no
statement can be derived that is both proven and disproven via the axioms of
the system). But since G is true (as can be proven in principle by expanding
upon the system to include true axioms bearing on the truth of G), the system
must be incomplete with respect to the truth of G.
[2] The
illustration as I describe it is a condensed and modified version of Rucker's
step-by-step explanation depicting a "Universal Truth Machine" and
Gödel himself as its operator in Rudy Rucker, Infinity and the Mind (New
York: Bantam Books, 1982), p. 174.
[3] "Reflection principles provide the very antithesis of formalist
reasoning. If one is careful, they enable one to leap outside the rigid
confinements of any formal system to obtain new mathematical insights that did
not seem to be available before." – Roger Penrose, The Emperor's New Mind (New York: Oxford, 1989), p. 144.
[4] Stephen Hawking, "Gödel and the End of Physics," lecture
given at the Dirac Centennial Celebration, Cambridge, UK, July 2002, http://www.hawking.org.uk/godel-and-the-end-of-physics.
[5] Thomas Nagel, The View from Nowhere (New York: Oxford University
Press, 1986), p. 26.
[6] Eleonore Stump, "The Problem of Evil," Faith & Philosophy, Vol. 2, No. 4 (Oct. 1985), p. 398.
[7] For a
comprehensive survey of historical and contemporary theology of the kingdom of
God, see Mark Saucy, The Kingdom of God in the Teaching of Jesus (Dallas:
Word, 1997).
[8] Stump, "The Problem of Evil," p. 409.
[9] Matthew 5:3, New King James Version. The New Century Version describes
these poor as "they…who recognize their spiritual poverty."
Presumably they belong in the same spiritual category with those who mourn, the
meek, those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, the merciful, the pure in
heart, the peacemakers, and those who are persecuted for righteousness' sake,
Matt. 5:4-10.
Comments
First, why does it have to be a physical world at all? Why can't our spirits just prove their worthiness in the spiritual realm? After all, that's where we spend eternity, anyway. I fail to see the point of having this physical world at all. If anything, we need to prove that we are worthy to abide with God in THAT realm, not this one.
Also, why do we need to prove ourselves at all? If god is omniscient, he already knows whether we are worthy. So what's the point of going through the motions of this test?
But here's the big kicker for me: Why doesn't our all-powerful creator just make people who ARE worthy? He could dispense with all the sorting of good from bad by simply not making any bad ones to begin with. As much as you might protest that it's our own fault that we are bad, you can't escape the problem: God made us what we are, and he knew it all along.
Heaven is supposed to be this perfect place. If there is free will there, then clearly God is capably of making a paradise where everyone has free will.
If there is not free will in heaven then clearly free will is no big deal.
Either way your argument fails.
Pix
Maybe you just don't like my answers?