Plantinga's
Basic Belief: Not Quite Basic
By Francois Tremblay
Posted August 23, 2004
The article I review here is
Alvin Plantinga's Intellectual
Sophistication and Basic Belief in God. But before I begin, it is of
great import to understand Reformed Epistemology, since it is the premise of
Plantinga's entire theological work.
I describe the position of
Reformed Epistemology, which is a category of Christian apologetics, in my book
"Handbook of Atheistic Apologetics". Basically, Reformed Epistemology
is an attempt to divert the burden of proof to atheistic shoulders by assuming
that theism is a "properly basic belief", giving it priority over
"non-basic" positions like atheism. We can express the reasoning
behind this apologetics position in a simple manner:
(1) Current (secular)
foundationalism is incomplete because it does not account for direct
perception.
(2) We have direct perception of
God (by a "divine sense").
(3) Therefore theism is properly
basic.
I detail three specific
objections to Reformed Epistemology in my book. I also discuss the components
of each premise in different articles. In "A
Support of Secular Foundationalism", I defend secular
foundationalism against both skeptic attacks and religious demands to put God
at its center. In The
Infallibility of Sense Perception, I both defend sense perception and
disprove the possibility of a divine sense.
Sense perception is accounted for
by secular foundationalism because it is the necessary center of rational
thinking. If we accept that reality is objective, which is to say that it can
only be found by extrospection, then the senses are by definition our sole
fundamental means to find reality. This is not surprising, since the capacity
to interface between the mind and exterior reality is precisely how we define
the senses in the first place. Also, using sensory data is a more complex
affair than simply receiving it, and can involve a lot of scientific and
psychological information. We will see that Plantinga fails to understand this,
even in obvious cases.
As for the divine sense, it is obvious
that there is actually nothing being perceived there. For one thing, the
results of that "perception" is extremely cultural-dependent, which
is an obvious sign of a subjective interpretation being imposed on simpler
objective phenomena. All we really have in our minds is the emotional impact of
holding religious belief, of which constructions of a divine sense seem to be
nothing more than a rationalization. Theism is not superior to atheism in
having a supposed perceived object, and even if it did, it would have no
relevance to theism's actual validity.
In his theological discussions,
Plantinga starts from the premise that Reformed Epistemology is a valid
position. Having "established" that theism is properly basic, all he
has to do now is to refute defeaters, his term for propositions that oppose a
basic belief. But even in this simple task, we will now see that Plantinga
fails. Leaning on Quinn (who is not even an atheologian, by Plantinga's own
admission), he posits that there is only one serious argument for
strong-atheism, the Problem of Evil:
"So these substantial
reasons for thinking theism false would be the atheological argument from evil
together with theories according to which theistic belief is illusory or merely
projective; here perhaps Quinn has in mind Marxist and Freudian theories of
religious belief."
And having summarily dismissed
psychological arguments, he concludes:
"This leaves us with the
atheological argument from evil as the sole substantial reason for thinking
[that "God does not exist" is] true."
This is normal laziness for bad,
or even average, theologians, but from a supposedly top-notch thinker like
Plantinga it is horribly deficient. It is well-known in the literature that
there are many supporting arguments to the proposition "God does not
exist", including noncognitivism, other incoherency arguments,
teleological arguments, Occam's Razor, and yes, even evidential arguments of
the type that Plantinga summarily rejects. Some of these arguments are
discussed in books such as Smith's "Atheism: The Case Against God",
Martin's "Atheism: A Philosophical Justification", "The
Impossibility of God", my own book, and also on the web site Strongatheism.net.
Setting these aside, is
Plantinga's defense against the Problem of Evil satisfactory? He expresses it
as a contradiction between these two propositions:
"5. God exists and is
omniscient, omnipotent, and wholly good
(...)
6. there are 10[13] turps of
evil"
With the "turp"
representing a unit of morality. But even if we grant the coherency of (6),
which is not necessarily problematic, Plantinga's escape is once again lazy:
"At present, I think
atheologians have given up the claim that (5) and (6) are incompatible, and
quite properly so. What they now say is that (5) is unlikely or improbable
with respect to (6);"
Why such sloppiness? In all my
readings of actual atheologians, I have not yet seen such a position. Which
atheologian upholds that (5) and (6) are not outright incompatible, and why ?
On this, he does not even sketch an explanation.
It is hard to understand what
Plantinga even means here: the Problem of Evil is certainly not an inductive
argument. And there is no way for the theologian to declare (5) and (6) even
potentially compatible: such attempts, even sophisticated ones, have
repeatedly failed (see Martin's book for an analysis of modern attempts, for
instance).
To come back to his presumption
about atheology, he concludes:
"no atheologian has given a
successful or cogent way of working out or developing a probabilistic
atheological argument from evil; and I believe there are good reasons for
thinking that it can't be done"
Plantinga seems to have a paucity
of imagination, as surely even he can see that there is a correlation between
the moral qualities of an individual and the moral qualities of his products,
thus making an inductive argument obvious. But I do not need to formulate such an
argument, since Michael Martin already did on page 326 of Atheism: A
Philosophical Justification with his Argument from Apparent Fallibility
(brackets his):
"(1) In terms of our
experience, most seeming errors or mistakes in the kinds of created entities we
have so far examined are the result of the fallibility of one or more creators
of the entities. [Empirical evidence]
(2) The universe is a created
entity. [Supposition]
(2a) If the universe is a created
entity, then it is an entity of a kind we have so far examined, with seeming
errors or mistakes. [Empirical evidence]
[Probably]
(3) The seeming errors or
mistakes in the universe are the result of the actions of a fallible being or
beings. [From (1), (2), and (2a) by predictive inference]
(4) If the theistic God exists,
then the seeming errors or mistakes in the universe are the results of the
actions of a being who is infallible. [Analytic truth]
(5) Therefore the theistic God
does not exist. [From (3) and (4) by modus tollens]"
His fallacious use of the
analytic-synthetic distinction notwithstanding, Martin's argument is both
inductive and sound. And while he applies it to suboptimal systems in evolution
and biology, some of his examples (such as genetic deformities) also apply to
the Problem of Evil. Therefore the Arguments from Apparent Fallibility is an
adequate "probabilistic atheological argument from evil", and soundly
refutes Plantinga's claim that there is no such argument.
His case does not end there. He
also proposes that a basic belief can still stand in the presence of a strong
defeater, because the existence itself of a basic belief is sufficient for
complete, unwavering belief in the face of non-basic defeaters:
"if a belief p is properly
basic in certain circumstances, then it has warrant or positive epistemic
status in those circumstances in which it is properly basic-warrant it does not
get by virtue of being believed on the evidential basis of other propositions.
(By hypothesis it is not believed on the evidential basis of other
propositions.)"
"And that therefore:
"To be successful, a
potential defeater for [a basic belief] must have as much or more warrant as
[the basic belief] does. And [a basic belief] can withstand the challenge
offered by a given defeater even if there is not independent evidence that
serves either to rebut or undercut the defeater in question; perhaps the
nonpropositional warrant that [the basic belief] enjoys is itself sufficient
(as in the above case of the missing letter) to withstand the challenge."
The case of the missing letter he
refers to is interesting because it shows us the kind of reasoning that leads
Plantinga to believe that basic beliefs are universally superior. He sets up an
example where all the circumstantial evidence (location, motive, opportunity,
habitual behaviour) points to the position that :
(1) Plantinga stole a letter from
the chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
But on the other hand, he clearly
remembers that:
(2) [Plantinga] was alone in the
woods all that afternoon, and [he] did not steal the letter.
He concludes that the basic
belief expressed in (2) is inherently superior to the propositional evidence
that supports (1), indicating that basic beliefs are inherently superior
because they necessarily hold more warrant to us.
However, there is a major problem
with this analysis. Even if we accept the analogy between (2) and a
hypothetical divine sense, the analogy itself does not prove that basic beliefs
are undefeatable by non-basic beliefs. It is set up to make the case in (1)
much weaker than it could actually be, since circumstantial evidence is not as
credible as direct evidence. For example, a surveillance video of Plantinga
stealing the letter would be direct evidence, and thus would make (1) more
credible.
Like any reasonable person,
Plantinga really compared the probabilities of (1) and (2) and concluded that
his recollection was more reliable than circumstantial evidence. But if he was
faced with a much stronger case for (1), of the type I just described, he would
no doubt change his mind and conclude that his memory is incomplete or
distorted. Otherwise, we would rightly say that he is being irrational. As
such, even if one believes in a divine sense, which is irrational, perception
of a god can in no way be considered universally superior to non-basic beliefs,
for the same reason.
I promised I would discuss the
complexity of Plantinga's so-called "basic beliefs", and this would
be a good time. As I just hinted at, (2) is not by any stretch of the
imagination a "basic" proposition. While it is held on the basis of
direct perception, its actual validity is predicated on a number of things,
including the integrity of one's memory, the validity of one's concepts and capacity
to apply them to reality, one's sense of responsibility, and so forth. Granted,
most of these restrictions apply to any proposition about one's direct
perception, including the direct perceptions that form the basis of (1), but
the point is that (2), while still obviously more credible in this particular
case, is not "basic" and not irrefutable.
Another example, more damageable
to Plantinga's case, appears later in the article:
"When God spoke to Moses out
of the burning bush, the belief that God was speaking to him, I daresay, had
more by way of warrant for him than would have been provided for its denial by
an early Freudian who strolled by and proposed the thesis that belief in God is
merely a matter of neurotic wish-fulfillment."
Let us express this basic belief
as:
(3) God was speaking to Moses out
of a burning bush.
These examples are so complex
that they show how absurd Plantinga's foundationalism is. (3) relies on, amongst
other things, the acceptance of miracles and the impossibility of naturalistic
explanations to account for (3), the knowledge of what a god is and how it
would speak, belief in the actual existence of a god, and so forth. And these,
in turn, are impossible to prove. (3) is not only non-basic, but absurd.
I have done enough already, but
there is one last thing that needs to be pointed out. Plantinga's position
seems to be one of naive realism. As I explained in The
Infallibility of Sense Perception, naive realism is the position that
appearance (perceptual, in this case) is reality. It is often used as a straw
man of realism in order to undermine the validity of the senses.
In this case, however, Plantinga
seems to be adopting it wholesale in order to bolster his superficial
justification for theism. In essence, he is stating that a proposition based on
direct perception is automatically valid regardless of the evidence. If a
context appears to us directly as being a certain way, then it must be that
way, whether we can actually understand and use the direct information
correctly or not. So I would certainly qualify Plantinga's position, and
Reformed Epistemology in general, as naive in the technical sense.
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