Cosmological argument an introduction

Mankind has always wanted to know why there is something rather than nothing; why we are here etc.

The cosmological argument says there needs to be an external source; a reason for the universe existing.

This external cause must be God – god must therefore be necessary.

The cosmological argument is an a posteriori argument – one which works backwards from the evidence to a conclusion.

It is also an inductive argument which means it goes beyond the premises to find a conclusion and this may not be necessarily found within the premises but involve a leap of faith.

Cause and effect

We see chains of cause and effect all around us and above all because we are born and we know we will die we assume that everything is governed by causes. The question therefore is can there be infinite chains of cause and effect? Infinite regress, or must there have been ultimately a first cause which caused everything to come into existence? If so then that first cause must be God.

Aristotle said ‘nothing can come from nothing’; he didn’t believe in infinite chains so he believed there must be an ‘unmoved mover.

Long after, Thomas Aquinas assimilated Aristotelian philosophy into Christianity. He believed that if nothing caused the chain then the chain couldn’t exist therefore something must have caused it since nothing can come from nothing therefore there had to be an ultimate cause.

There must be a prime mover, an uncaused cause which exists outside the universe, not governed by causal rules; not having a cause itself; this being we call God.

Q Think about Adam and Eve what kind of answer is this story? What is the alternative to believing it?

To religious philosophers God has to be still active in the world, still in control of the events and still interested in its development. To use an analogy God is like a farmer who plants a seed and nurtures and weeds it to get the best out of it.

Critics of this argument would argue if everything has a cause why exempt God from that? The answer is that if God is as St Anselm has said ‘the greatest being imaginable’ then for God to have been created would mean there was still something greater. Therefore God must be self-causing.

Hume says why must it be God – even if there was a first cause why must that be God? He also saw no point in looking for explanations beyond the universe: either it has no explanation or we must look within the universe for an answer. One way he suggested to accept that maybe infinite regress was not impossible was if we accept cause and effect as arbitrarily imposed on the universe, something we ‘see’ because we need an explanation, but he believed that cause and effect were not necessarily linked. Indeed at the sub-atomic level in physics today many believe that everything is in chaos. Immanuel Kant also believed that order was just something we had imposed on creation because we can’t cope with disorder. As Hume said we don’t have the experience or the technology to understand yet but eventually we will, but just because we don’t understand at the moment doesn’t mean we have to posit a God as the answer to all the unanswerable questions.

Aquinas put forward 5 reasons we should believe god exists. These are known as The Five Ways and we have already dealt with the first two:

  1. The argument from the unmoved mover
  2. The argument from the uncaused cause
  3. The argument from possibility and necessity

This is the idea that God has to exist.

We are contingent beings; the universe is a contingent place – in other words we need other things, factors, for us to exist. You are dependent for your existence on your parents and they on their parents. So also then the universe is dependent for its existence on something which brought it into existence.

As you can see this is a progression from Aquinas’ other arguments. He goes on to argue though everything in the universe is dependent for its existence on something else there must be something upon which everything’s existence is dependent and that must be something whose existence is not dependent upon anything else and that must therefore be God.

He says at one time nothing existed and therefore any one of two states were equally possible: nothing or something, and for something to exist something else was necessary to will it into existence. That necessary being was God and God was necessary for everything to exist. Without God therefore nothing would exist.

However good Aquinas’ arguments were he realised they were not sufficient to:

  1. Prove the existence of God
  2. Prove that God is worthy of worship
  3. Or even prove that God has good qualities

Hume would agree here: what’s to say that this necessary being is indeed God: ‘we can never ascribe to the cause any qualities but what are exactly sufficient to produce the effect’.

But Aquinas believed his arguments would help someone with faith to have a firmer foundation but that we couldn’t come to know God by our own efforts, we need divine revelation.

Bertrand Russell declared the universe just exists, that’s all there is to it – Brute Fact and to discuss the underlying meaning of it is pointless since we can never know the answer.

Specimen answer to Anthology question on Westphal paragraph 28

a) Clarify the argument or interpretation in the passage. [30]

This paragraph comes into Westphal’s section on Hume and the Hermeneutics of Suspicion and follows on from Hume’s suggestion that religion is primarily grounded in “self-deception and self-interest” which to him means flattering the gods for simple personal benefit and at cost to others; as a result, he argues, religion is purely selfish.

According to Westphal, who is giving an overview of the history and developments of the ideas in the philosophy of religion, Marx and Nietzsche are concerned with just that “self-interest and self-deception” What is meant by these terms is their belief that at the heart of religion lies selfishness. That everything which ‘religious’ people believe and practice is founded on the false premise that religion or God can help make this life better or if not in this one at least in the next.

Marx’s overriding concern is to explain that in his opinion religion is ‘manufactured’ i.e. made up by people in power as justification for their power and to keep their power.

His opinion is that nothing does the job of keeping the masses under control, so effectively, as religion and with the tacit consent of the priests the oppressed are encouraged to suffer their oppression in the (false) hope of better things to come. Thus, to Marx and Nietzsche, the place that religion occupies in society is much more important than the psychological effects or reasons given for religious faith.

Their position arose out of a history of religious ideas which beginning with the enlightenment and Hume and Kant’s demolition of the traditional ‘proofs’ for the existence of God – the Cosmological, Teleological and Ontological arguments – had led more and more to a secularised form of religion; one where there was a deliberate intention to cause no offense, to prevent any more historical atrocities like the Inquisition or the Crusades; to find the common ground in all religions and promote those rather than differences. Both Marx and Nietzsche felt that all investigation into religion took as its starting point the ‘truth’ of religion but to them religion had no history separate from the economic and political history of the society in which it was found. Religion is not the disease but the symptom of a diseased society.

By Marx’s time he felt that religion had had its day: whether intellectual, rational or relying on the more supernatural elements like religious experience or miracles and with Nietzsche reached its nadir when he proclaimed ‘God is dead.’

Marx’s belief was that ‘Religion was the opium of the people’ used by oppressors to make people feel better about the distress they experience due to being poor and exploited. His view was that leaders in society got together and decided to call ‘god’ the highest authority and the church (in the form of priests or religion) his or its agent on earth. The monarchy and nobles were then divinely ordained by ‘god’ who had placed them in earthly power. Anyone who objects therefore had to take the matter up with god! ‘We’re only doing our job’ they would reply to any criticism and who could argue with that? Couple it with threats to your soul and your place in heaven and it would take a particularly brave person to object. (Silly idea here: mums who threaten ‘wait till your father gets home!’)

Pelagius by contrast, in the 5th century AD, believed that we did not need the conduit of priests to approach God and who tried to hold humanity up to a greater responsibility for individual actions but he failed to convince the church of his day of his beliefs and for his pains was excommunicated by the church.

Indeed in just the history of Christianity there are many instances where teachings from the holy book have been used to subjugate, enslave or just deny the rights to different groups of people. For example in St Paul’s first letter to Timothy chapter 2 he specifically demands that women not teach, to be subject to men, to be silent and godly and gives as his reason the fact that man was created first, not woman, and above all it was a woman who committed the first transgression (sin!) This Genesis text in chapter 2(rather than the other Genesis creation story in chapter 1 in which God creates male and female equally and at the same time) has been used for centuries by the Church to deny women equal rights with men not just in the church but in the world and society at large. Indeed it continues to prevent women being priests in the Roman Catholic Church though the Protestant movement has by and large adopted women priests as a policy.

His major criticism is that ‘God’ is being used as the final and highest authority to support instances of oppression, enslavement and denial of basic human rights. Marx regards ‘every society as involving political and economic exploitation.’ To claim ‘it says so in the Bible’ or ‘God told me’ like George W Bush did of his war on Iraq in 2003 is not sufficient and leads to gross injustice.

Interestingly, historically speaking, no totalitarian regime has ever approached anything like religion for its absolute and unquestioning hold on the masses and religions power to endure is second to none.

In the end it comes down to his fervent belief that religion is just the enforcement arm of society and used for the purposes of maintaining the status quo or the existing power structures (this is the self-interest) and giving society’s hierarchical structures the ‘weight of law.’ Religion is therefore deluding its adherents into acceptance and making them complicit in society’s ideological imperatives (i.e. they go along with the majority attitudes, for to object is made too difficult and can result in rejection by society.) This is the self-deception of religious people.

[Supplementary suggestions: look at how the bible has been used to condone slavery; condemn homosexuality; promote war; to enable the church to get rich by charging for all sorts of things including special dispensations to get into heaven!! Creationists and objections to the teaching of evolution in schools (thanks to some of you for most of these ideas) And what about the way insurance companies have used the phrase ‘Acts of God’ to wriggle out of paying out on claims!!!]

Look up these websites – all of you!!!

Religion as Opium of the People

The Church

Christianity and slavery

What the Bible Says – And Doesn’t Say – About Homosexuality
this website is a mine of information about how the bible has been misused to promote all sort of atrocities and prejudices.

b) Do you agree with the ideas expressed? Justify your point of view and discuss its implications for understanding religion and human experience. [20]

DO YOU AGREE? (With Marx and Nietzsche? If so why? What is wrong with the influence of religion? Can it ever be a good influence? What would life be like without it? What would society be like? What events might never have occurred? Have we like Nietzsche said outgrown our need for God / gods? Does this mean religious experiences are never valid? What implications does that have? Are people deluded? Mad? Special? Ill? Just plain misguided? How do we explain the ‘inner conviction’ that these experiences are genuine?????)

NOW…………………………………………

Specific examples of art, music, literature etc inspired by religion

Remember

Not Westphal’s ideas he is merely citing others’.

Hume’s view was self-deception i.e. one deceives oneself; Marx and Nietzsche argued the deception was imposed by a stronger group on a weaker one for the purposes of retaining or gaining power (think about the missionaries preaching Christianity to the natives in Africa etc so the British could exploit their natural resources without opposition!!) (Or Apartheid – White power in South Africa)

M and N don’t believe in God and are fierce opponents to religion because they both felt it hindered humanity’s development and ability to take responsibility for its own actions – religion allows people to absolve themselves of responsibility and defer it to a higher power!!

Whereas Hegel and Kant have been concerned with husks and kernels to get at the central truths of religion (scepticism) – Hume through his rational interpretation of the context of the texts (suspicion) is concerned to show that religion is based on deception – for him deception of ourselves, for Marx it is deception of the masses by the privileged. Marx predicted the masses would revolt when they finally realised they were being duped; they did in 1917 in Russia, in 1789 in France where they had an absolute monarchy.

So M took Hume a stage further and regarded religion as a tool of those whose self-interest lay in the maintaining of the status quo and their positions of power and authority or privilege. These people aided by the priests, then perpetrated the crime of foisting on to the masses religious ideas that God wants people to behave and accept their lot in life and failure to comply would mean punishment in the next life if not in this one! Hence religion became the tool by which the masses were controlled but also the tool which the oppressors used to keep their positions.

Self-interest – I want to believe x loves me therefore I deceive myself into believing x does; OR: I want to believer there is a reason for the suffering in this life therefore I believe that there is a God who has a grand scheme for all of this. Because that is reassuring or consolation!

The religion holds all the cards i.e. access to the afterlife / forgiveness / hope…

Slavery was justified by the church on the grounds that… it was not condemned in the Bible just regulated; those enslaved were not fully human, little more than animals!

For Hume religion was a prop to the ego whereas to Durkheim religion was the binding force of society.

Instrumental religion – means ceremonies and practices like baptism, confirmation, prayer, marriage, funeral services – fetish faith – where ritual becomes more important (almost worshipped in its own right) than the kernel or core beliefs. EG going to church on Sunday more imp than true Christian behaviour. As a result religion has an iron grip on the life of individuals through the marking of the important stages with its rituals (think about tribal cultures where a boy has to undergo a rite of passage from boyhood to adulthood and if he fails he is outcast!)

Nietzsche’s’ slave revolt was the fact that when people are enslaved they abdicate all responsibility for their actions and transfer responsibility to their masters; however slaves want revenge and since they are not usually in a position to gain this they enlist the aid of the ‘priests’ to promise punishment of their oppressors in the next life if not in this one.

Other questions to consider – where does morality come from? God? Can we not be good without God? Is there no morality without God?

And to finish with:

Voltaire: ‘if God did not exist it would be necessary to invent him.’