MCGRATH AND RELIGIOUS
CIRCULAR BELIEFS
Some people argue that God exists for he wrote the Bible and we know that the Bible is right for God wrote it. Obviously this kind of thinking looks very dangerous. You could argue that John murdered Katie for he was insane and you know he was insane for he murdered Katie but is better now and should not go to jail.
Many important philosophers assert that a circular argument is not necessarily illogical or bad. The form of such is A is B for B is A. it just repeats itself to prove itself and a repeat is not a proof for it hangs in the air and no proof is given for it.
It is believed by some that to believe in what the senses tell us, and
therefore in science (reason is the tool of science) and in ethics we cannot
offer proof but only a circular argument.
"What my senses tell me is true and I trust my senses because they are right".
They say that without this circular argument we can know and believe
nothing. They say we believe in the
existence of other people and that how nature behaves now is how it always will
behave without evidence.
We see with our eyes and hear that nature does not change so we do have
evidence for we see no reason why some being or demon would deceive all the
time and even have us thinking that other people exist when they do not. Even if we are deceived it is still
reasonable to believe in what they tell us for believing something does not
necessarily mean it is probably true but it does necessarily mean you think it
is probably true. That is the answer to
those who say our belief in everything is based on the blind belief that we are
awake and logged into reality and not dreaming now. When the senses are reasonably trusted so are
science and ethics which spring from our sense-knowledge.
PJ McGrath said that science is based on circular reasoning and this is rational though he believes that circular reasoning is sometimes irrational and a mistake (Believing in God, page 29). Science presupposes that the laws of nature do not change. It has no evidence for this yet it says that anything it discovers is true. The result is a circular argument. It is certainly true that you have to assume order in order to function in the world at all. If you believed there was a miracle-working power, not necessarily a God but say a superhuman ghost, that would mean that if you stab somebody and they die that you did not commit murder. You only stabbed them and the ghost let them die and didn't do a miracle to save them. So it is the ghosts fault. Miracles speak of this ghost for they do not clearly speak of God so belief in miracle is evil and completely attacks science. A religion will say that it is God doing the miracles though many even within that religion will have doubts about that. Science cannot say what it is but will consider the ghost to be a more likely idea than God for it is easier for ghosts to exist than for God to exist. But science will develop theories about what is doing the miracles and will not consider it a duty to agree with religion that it is God that is doing the miracles unless evidence comes up. Science bases dogma on facts and evidence while religion does the opposite. So you have to make assumptions that some things do not change in order to investigate anything at all.
So McGrath says we believe in science because we believe nature does not change and nature does not change for we believe in science. But if so then why not simply assume that nature is always the same instead of arguing that nature is the same because science works and science works for nature is always the same? That is, why not say nature does not change so we can do science and leave it at that? That is more rational.
When you use a circular argument you are assuming anyway. So why not omit the circle and just make an assumption? Suppose you want to believe x. It is better to just assume that x is true. It is foolish to say that x is shown to be true by y and y is true for x is true for that is just repeating yourself in a different way and calling it an argument.
Think of it this way, “Science tells me about reality
through sense-experience and sense-experience should be heeded so nature does
not change for that is what I learn through sense experience”.
That removes the circularity altogether and grounds it in evidence.
In other words, you are not saying what you see or hear is real but you are
merely saying that it bears witness to you so you are entitled to believe it for
you see no proof that it is wrong or lying. It is just the same way as
believing a friend. What they say when you know them is sufficient
evidence that what they say should be accepted as true. You could be wrong
and they could be wrong but that is not the point. The point is
believability and belief is not certainty.
McGrath said that ethics has no justification either so ethical judgements are
in the same boat as science. This is
wrong for he has obviously only studied the popular theories of right and wrong
which are certainly full of error.
Experience tells us what should be right and wrong.
McGrath would surely agree that a needless circular argument, needless in
the sense that it does not give us belief or knowledge, would be
irrational. So to say science is true
because my blind faith in the senses says so and my blind faith is right
because science is true would be a rational blind belief but to believe that
cats are demons because a witch said so and the witch is right for cats are
demons is irrational. But we can
practice science and ethics and logic without believing in them so that fails
completely. If a circular argument is a
mistake then even if you need it, it is still wrong. Needing a doctrine does not make it true or
likely to be true. And you don’t need it
for you can believe that you can neither believe or disbelieve anything and
still live a normal life in case what you experience is real and in case it’s
not some kind of a dream. If we can
survive without knowledge then knowledge does not matter.
He cannot say that if the arguments for the validity of the senses and
science and ethics are circular reasoning then it is illogical to believe in
them. McGrath says that the circles he
approves are right but other ones, ones that are not the basis of the power to
know and believe, like, “The Bible is true for God has spoken and God has
spoken for the Bible is true,” or, “John killed my cat because Mary said so and
Mary said so because John killed the cat”, are not needed and are
illogical. The only thing good I can say
about this is that it shows that the less you need your vicious circle the more
irrational it is. The ones that are not
basic are worse than the circles for science and ethics. Also, you can’t logically argue what you like
about science and the rational ethic but you can with the non-basic
circle. For example, if the example we
used is rational so is this one to the same extent, “I am God for I say so and
I say so for I am God”. It would be
arbitrary and bigoted for religion to say you shouldn’t say that. Circular arguments would be undesirable
things so if they are needed we should use as few of them as possible. That is what needing them would imply, that
we should have only as few as possible.
McGrath does not realise that it is not the consequences of circular
reasoning that determine if it is sensible or not but the nature of the argument
and its nature is invariably irrational.
This is true of the circular arguments he accepts as valid as well as of
the invalid ones. You cannot see the
consequences unless you reason in the first place so consequences have nothing
to do with it for they have no validity apart from reasoning. Circular reasoning says reason is wrong and so
how could you base reason on an illogical foundation? It is like trying to
see the forests of Bavaria while wearing a blindfold.
If we know reason is true then it follows that science and ethics can’t
be circular when they are based on reason.
So, what he should be writing is that we accept reason only by circular
reasoning. But if we assume reason is
true then we are saying, “I assume reason is true and science is true and that
I should do good for reason says so and reason is right for I assume it to be
true”.
Perhaps we can’t expect to find a ground for knowledge that is completely
rational but just have to use the best we can come up with and it might be a
vicious circle with evidence for itself.
We would however be thinking fully rationally with it though the content
is partly irrational. I mean in the way
it is rational to think the best logic you can.
It is an error to say that A is true because A is true because that is
not giving a reason but repeating yourself.
It is all right if you know that A is true but A is not made true by you
saying it is true because it is true. To
say that is to pretend you know that it is true.
It is rational to say that “A is true because A is true because I know
it”, and not to say, “A is true because A is true”,
because the first is more accurate and says what you mean by true, that you know
it to be true. The second is a circular
argument. The person using circular
reasoning can never say she knows she is right.
It is better to believe a circular argument that you need to believe in
science and maths and in the world. But
religion does not need belief in God or in Jesuses
coming back from the dead or in an afterlife like it might need a circular
argument for the correctness of right reason.
If you don't have a belief that what you sense is real you will be able to learn nothing. So believing in the validity of the senses is a basic belief, you need that before you can believe in anything else. Its basic to your knowledge.
McGrath originally believed that religious belief might be reasonable if
it was circular for if you prove something with X then you have to prove that X
is proven by Y and that Y is proven by Z and so on ad infinitum. This can’t be done so you need the
circle. He believed that the foundations
of knowledge depended on circles which verified this. But he said that his reader must decide if it
is reasonable in the sense that it has evidence.
Later he repudiated the idea that religious circles might be reasonable. He rejected it for only circles that had to do with knowledge could be accepted and religious belief has nothing to do with becoming a basis for knowledge. Some religionists would say that belief in God is a basic belief for if we believe in God we can trust in what the senses and our thinking tell us for he made them. But it is only necessary to believe that the senses and reason are right. It is easier to believe that they are just right than it is to believe that they are right because of a God. It is also more dignified and more self-confident.
Mc Grath decided that if faith in
religion was circular in its foundation then one can only appreciate the evidence
for a religion if one already believes.
For example, if your basic belief is in the
Bible and you believe in the Bible because of a circle you can see the evidence
but not believe in the Bible because of the evidence for you are not treating
the evidence as evidence though you perceive the evidence. The circle interprets the evidence for you
and the evidence is not allowed to stand on its own two feet and tell you what
is what. This is putting the conclusion
before the premises, the belief before the evidence and then looking only at
what evidence you want to see and looking at it the way you are biased to see
it. You pay lip service to the evidence, pretend
you believe because of it when you don't and would "believe" without it. This is what those who tell you to
become a Christian without evidence and you will see the evidence are telling you to do.
It is an extremely dishonest approach.
Any religion could say that you have to join it and you will appreciate
the evidence then. There would be no way
of telling true from false with that logic.
The believer and the unbeliever should be able to equally understand the
evidence and see what it says and absorb it.
McGrath believed that when God speaks and one says that one will not
believe until God is proved and it is proved that God should be believed then
this is not faith or trust but mistrust.
He thought that a husband saying that he would only believe in his wife
if she proved she was faithful showed that this was not trust in any form. Because of this he argued that proofs for God
would not be needed and indeed would be undesirable (page 22). The truth is that you have to prove your wife
exists as well as you can before you can love her and
then you trust her without looking for proof all the time. The husband always has some proof that he
should trust his wife for there can be no trust without evidence – he just does
not make her prove everything for he has enough evidence. Also, a man can trust his wife for he knows
her as a human being. But God is
invisible and out of reach so we can’t say the same of him. We don’t know his nature to trust him. We don’t know if his revelation of himself is
himself as he really is. Unlike the
husband we have no evidence. God
speaking is not enough for many have sworn that God has spoken when he hasn’t. The Christian faith has always insisted that
faith is a gift from God and is supernatural (Ephesians 2) which means that God
causes you to believe by presenting evidence and influence how you see it which
he would not be doing if you could do it yourself meaning that the Christian
has to believe in God and the religion before they get the evidence! Biblical faith is about being biased and
narrow-minded. And God never gives much
evidence to the average believer which proves this. The less evidence the more biased and bigoted
and arrogant the believer is.
A husband can trust his wife and check up on her not because he thinks
she is doing something wrong but because trust is not complete certainty anyway
and she should be flattered that he
wants to reduce the uncertainty for it will make her look better in his
sight. She knows that if she behaves
herself that she has nothing to fear. God
gives us such poor evidence for his existence and he gives us even worse
evidence for what he is like and stands for. The lack of decent evidence
indicates that there is no God.
McGrath, like Vatican II, saw faith as God revealing himself to a person
now instead of a person learning doctrine and ideas that are supposed to be about
showing what God is like or what God is. The doctrines and ideas tell you about God but
God works through your thoughts and feelings and perceptions of them to see that
what they say about God is true. It is like God revealing the truth in a book
or whatever and then working within you to reveal to you that the book is
true. He uses the book not to reveal himself but
as a tool in which he can be perceived and sensed. Faith is God revealing himself to
you. That is faith because to believe in a book that God wrote to reveal
himself is not as good as God personally, person to person, revealing himself
and perhaps using the book as a tool. It is God
indirectly revealing to you and direct is more personal, friendly and
intimate. And you are not as sure that
it is really God’s work unless God is in communion with you. The chief reason for faith having to be a
direct revelation to the individual is that this makes faith about a
relationship with God instead of just learning about God. But many people have claimed to have had
supernatural faith in revelations from God and then discovered that faith was
wrong.
McGrath stated that the Catholic tendency to use philosophical proofs for
God in preference to proving that God has spoken and shown us thereby that he
exists is not a reverent approach. The
revelation would come first. And
philosophy could lead to atheism.
Anybody who says that to believe in God because of reason is not to
believe in God because of God’s authority is wrong for we cannot stop thinking
or reasoning anyway. We can’t trust
God at all without thinking and if thinking before trusting him is a bad thing
then it is better than the alternative.
BOOKS
CONSULTED
A Catechism of
Christian Doctrine, Catholic Truth Society,
A Common Faith, John Dewey,
A Primer of
Necessary Belief, Dawson Jackson ,Victor Gollancz Ltd,
Apologetics and
Catholic Doctrine, M H Gill and Son Ltd,
Faith and Ambiguity,
Stewart R Sutherland, SCM Press,
God and
Philosophy,
In Defence of the
Faith, Dave Hunt, Harvest House, Eugene Oregon, 1996
On Being a Christian, Hans Kung, Collins/Fount Paperbacks,
Reason and Belief, Bland Blanschard,
Reason and Religion, Anthony Kenny, Basil Blackwell Ltd,
The Balance of Truth, EI Watkin,
Hollis & Carter,
The Case Against Christ, John Young, Falcon Books,
The Faith of a Subaltern, Alec de Candole,
Cambridge University Press, 1919
The Fundamental Questions of Philosophy, A.C.
Ewing, Routledge and Kegan
Paul,
The Future of Belief Debate, Ed Gregory Baum, Herder and Herder,
The Student’s
Catholic Doctrine, Rev Charles Hart BA, Burns & Oates,
Unblind Faith, Michael J Langford, SCM,
What
is Christianity? Very Rev W Moran DD,
Catholic Truth Society of
What is
Faith? Anthony Kenny,
THE WEB
THE PROBLEMS WITH BELIEFS www.nobeliefs.com/beliefs.htm