Is There Evidence for God? | William Lane Craig & Kevin Scharp
Video Statistics and Information
Channel: The Veritas Forum
Views: 60,243
Rating: 4.8000002 out of 5
Keywords: veritas forum, william lane craig, kevin scharp, philosophy, christian, atheist
Id: 8KMd_eS2J7o
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 77min 48sec (4668 seconds)
Published: Thu Mar 31 2016
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This is a recent debate between William Lane Craig and Kevin Scharp. Professor Scharp will also be doing an AMA here on /r/philosophy Wednesday September 7 at 11AM EST - please see this post where you can submit questions ahead of time, or join us Wednesday at 11AM in welcoming Prof. Scharp to our community.
Professor Scharp's slides and script can be found here.
Around 45:25 we have this exchange:
I don't understand Scharp's point here. Why is the theist responsible for demonstrating that it's not unlikely that God, if he existed, would create life-permitting conditions? The "divine psychology" objection might suggest that we can't have any idea of what God would do (if he existed), but even then, doesn't the probability that God (if he existed) would create life-permitting conditions rest at a comfortable .5? And this is much higher than the probability of naturalistic conditions leading to life-permitting conditions, which is sufficient for the fine-tuning argument through.
I don't like WLC, i feel that all the this is confusing me, and using oral-communication-skill to distort the debate. He does not seem to be honest about having a clear debate. He has argued about the evidence of god many times but still "confuses" som of the opponents basic arguments. How can you know what what he mean efter hearing it for 20 time?
Craig: "If you think it's more probably true than false, I would say that is enough for belief"
Scharp: "Not according to contemporary epistemology"
I don't understand this appeal to consensus. Consensus holds very little weight in philosophy. Scharp goes on to say that you need at least 70 or 80 percent confidence in a proposition in order to have a belief. Where is he getting this from? What argument does he present? Is it an appeal to intuition? Well that's no better than what Craig is offering when he says 51% constitutes belief.
Craig: "It doesn't seem to me that there is any non-arbitrary level that you could set to say this is what's required to be a theist"
Scharp: "I'm not saying it's required to be a theist, I'm saying it's required for belief"
But theism just is the belief in the proposition "God exists".
Scharp questions the Christian doctrine of hell, implying it's an immoral doctrine where God sort of blackmails people into accepting him. CS Lewis wrote on this topic and I think he gave a good response to it. God is basically the ultimate good, and God is the thing that gives anything else it's goodness. So when humans freely choose to remain separated from God, they willingly deprive themselves of the ultimate good. It's as if a thirsty man is walking in a desert, and God offers water, but the man rejects it. It's not that God is causing the suffering and death of the man. God is trying to help the man but the man rejects the thing that could give him health and happiness. As Lewis said, "The gates of hell are locked on the inside". Those who reject God do so willingly, and God respects that free choice. He does not impose himself on them. But the nature of reality is such that a state of separation from God is one of suffering. It is not the suffering of one man torturing another man, but rather the suffering of the parched man who freely rejects the offer of water.
By the way, this format of debate was not good. Craig and Scharp barely had any opportunity to respond to each other. The best part was the 20 minute back and forth session (all of these God debates should have the majority of time spent in this back and forth format), but the moderator wasted a lot of that time.
There was so much Scharp said that I take issue with. At the end for example he advised the audience to think for themselves and craft their own beliefs instead of adopting old beliefs, and he implied that Christian beliefs are no good because they're from the iron age. But this is just chronological snobbery, to quote Lewis again. Just because an idea is old doesn't mean it's false.
Scharp is asked for an argument in favor of the nonexistence of God, and he gives what he calls a "confidence" argument, that you should have more confidence in scientific theories than in the evidence that has been presented for God. But this "confidence" argument is not an argument that leads to the conclusion "God does not exist". It's just an argument that at best leads to agnosticism.
if reality is transcendent then why do we insist it must conform to our logic and reason? if reality transcends our reason then how can we conclude the universe must be metaphysically such and such?
I really love WLC honestly. I know it's not a popular view but I'd put him easily in my top 3 favorite living philosophers.