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1494 lines
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Plaintext
23 page printout
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The value of this 360K disk is $7.00. This disk, its printout,
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or copies of either are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
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Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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**** ****
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The following debate was held at The Linwood Forum of Kansas
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City, Mo. -- in Dr. Jenkins' Linwood Boulevard Christian Church --
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on Sunday evening, April 13, 1930. Rev. Burris A. Jenkins argued
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the affirmative and E. Haldeman-Julius argued the negative in this
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debate, which was stated in the following form: "Resolved, That
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Theism Is a Logical Philosophy." We publish herewith a verbatim
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report of the debate.
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**** ****
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IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
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Affirmative Argument
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By Rev. Burris Jenkins
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Ladies and Gentlemen: Permit me first of all to express, or
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try to express, my personal gratitude to Mr. E. Haldeman-Julius for
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coming up here tonight to debate with me, and incidentally to help
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The Linwood Forum out of the hole; and no doubt I may be permitted
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in your behalf to express your gratitude to him for this work of
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kindliness and charity.
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I have debated with a good many brilliant men, here and
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elsewhere, such as our good old friend Clarence Darrow, a number of
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times, Judge Ben Lindsey, a number, and Harry Elmer Barnes; but I
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have never debated with a keener mind, crossed swords with a more
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brilliant rapier, than I shall be called upon to do tonight. And I
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must confess a great deal of timidity in going up against the power
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of this man's mind. There is no discount, too, on his courage. He
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maintains his view, whether it is popular or unpopular, whether the
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skies stand or whether they fall.
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I should like the question to read -- and I think he gives his
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consent -- Resolved, that belief in God is a logical philosophy.
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Theism is a term that not everybody grasps, but belief in God
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everybody does. Of course the subject is a metaphysical one, a
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philosophical theme. Somebody has said that a metaphysician is a
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blind man groping around in a dark room after a black cat that is
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not there. A pretty fair definition of those who try to explore the
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ultimate sources of human knowledge and the ultimate basis of human
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thinking. And that is exactly what we are undertaking to do here
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tonight.
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**** ****
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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1
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IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
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A Universal Tendency of Men to Believe in God
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One who sets out to prove that there is a God is rather
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wasting breath. There is no demonstration, either for or against.
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People are incorrigible believers, for the most part, and have been
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throughout the course of history, in the existence of a controlling
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mind, spirit, something which they personify as God; and perhaps
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the very first argument which may be adduced for the probability of
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his being lies in this all but universal tendency of the human mind
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so to think. Particularly the greatest of human minds from the dawn
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of history have been theists, from Plato and Aristotle, easily to
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be recognized as perhaps the greatest minds of antiquity, and
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beyond whom we have not grown very much, with all of our so-called
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evolution and development, on down through the Middle Ages and the
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Renaissance, to such men as Leonardo da Vinci, the universally
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minded, and Goethe, and Heine, and Shakespeare, clear on to our
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present day. It is a rare thing to find in the course of history
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one who has declared for a very definite atheism. Perhaps you may
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meet a man who calls himself an atheist. But when you come to know
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him, his actions speak louder than his words. Clarence Darrow
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claims to be an atheist. You all have met him -- at least you have
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seen him -- and you know the difference between his philosophy and
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the practicality of his life. He holds that this great universe of
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ours is nothing but a machine; that it is just a happen-so, nobody
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ever started it, no mind ever designed it; that it is a pretty
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dangerous and a pretty cruel machine, that it grinds these little
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human beings, each one of us, into powder, and that when the
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curtain comes down on the end of our careers there is night; that
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we go out into everlasting darkness and everlasting sleep; and he
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does not think that life is worth living at all. I hold that
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pessimism is the logic of atheism, the feeling that life is not
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worth while. I do not see how one can very well escape from that
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natural result of the premise that there is no controlling over-
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soul, or mind. One time when I said to Mr. Darrow, "If you think it
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is true we are only happy when we are asleep and don't know
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anything, why don't you go to sleep? It is an easy thing, just one
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little pull at a trigger," the dear old gentleman said, "I want to
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see the curtain go down on the last act." The logic of his
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unconscious belief is more powerful than that of his avowed belief.
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The interest that my opponent takes in life, the avidity with
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which he attacks his work -- he just now told me in my office that
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he was having a world of fun out of his business, his life; of
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course be is; you can see it shining in his face; and his actions
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speak louder than his words -- show that he believes in life. It
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seems to me that this thing which we call personality,
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contradictory as it is oftentimes, living differently from what it
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thinks and believes, this strange, queer thing we call I, Me,
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individuality, is the hardest thing for the atheist to get over, to
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account for. I do not See how he can reach any philosophy which
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will be final without explaining, to a degree at least, the
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existence of the Me, the I.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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2
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IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
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The Argument by Descartes
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from Personality
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It is the father of modern philosophy who starts with this
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proposition as the beginning of his whole system. I refer, of
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course, to Descartes. There are those who, of course, would try to
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persuade us that we can't be sure of our own existence; that we
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can't be sure of anybody else in the world; that all this scheme of
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things, the stars, the moon, the rain, these whirling worlds, all
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this may be illusion, delusion; that we can't be sure of the
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existence of any of them; that we may simply deceive ourselves all
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the time.
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But Descartes starts out with this proposition: "I think.
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Therefore I am." And with that as a basis he builds up his entire
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system of philosophy. I think that he stands upon firm ground and
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that he starts from a good starting-point. When I realize that I am
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an entity, an individual, a personality, I think, there is no
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illusion about it, because I am sure. I think. Therefore I must
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exist. From that I pass on by graduated steps to the assurance that
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my neighbor exists. I meet and compare notes with my friend; I know
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that he exists; he gives me his ideas and I give him mine, for what
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||
they are worth. We interchange thoughts; and nothing can convince
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me that E. Haldeman-Julius does not live, He is very much alive.
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From that we go on by steps building up a system that is
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logical and practicable and applicable to human life, which lands
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us at theism. As a matter of fact, it is a far easier thing to
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account for this universe on a theistic basis than it is on an
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atheistic one. I do not envy the man who tries to make some sort of
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logical and philosophical scheme which will account for all this
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without a great mind, a great soul, a great creative artist back of
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it all. It seeing to me there is no escape from the assumption
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||
that, unless there is such an individuality behind our personality
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and behind all this great system of whirling worlds, the whole
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thing is just chance, just chaos, just a happen-so: that is utterly
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inescapable. There is no philosophy that fits it except the
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philosophy of a creative mind and a purpose running through. Of our
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||
great scientists of today, most of them are driven by their
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||
researches beyond the limits of human knowledge to the belief that
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||
the origin of it all must be in another Great Scientist who built
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it, established its laws, set it going upon its way.
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You may call the names of the leading scientists of today and
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||
most of them are theists, believers in God. On the other side of
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||
the water there are Sir Oliver Lodge and J.B.S. Haldane; on this
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||
side of the water, Michael Pupin, Robert Millikan, men of that
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||
stamp, experts in their field of scientific investigation. I know
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||
that Mr. Harry Elmer Barnes, in his The Twilight of Christianity,
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||
insists that these men all have compartmental minds, that they are
|
||
all right enough in their own compartments of astronomy, or
|
||
physics, but that they have no right at all to speculate as to
|
||
ultimate things of philosophy, metaphysics. Mr. Barnes insists that
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||
he has that right because his science is anthropology and
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||
sociology, and that he can speculate as to all this, but all these
|
||
other gentlemen are not sufficiently informed. And so he says there
|
||
is a twilight.
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||
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|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
3
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|
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IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
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Well, there are compartments and compartments; and these
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gentlemen, having demonstrated their ability in scientific realms,
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are surely justified in using the same brain power in speculating
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in metaphysical realms as well; and when we bear in mind that the
|
||
greatest of the human intellects from the beginning clear down to
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the present time, so far as their thoughts are recorded, are driven
|
||
to the conclusion that there must be a creative power back of it
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||
all and an increasing purpose running through it all, when we
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||
realize this fact, then we begin to appreciate that, unless the
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||
whole of the human race, with its past experience, is utterly
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||
illogical, then belief in God must be a logical position.
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The Pragmatic Working of the
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Theistic Belief
|
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It is not very long since there was current in America a
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||
system of philosophy called pragmatism. It was in very great vogue
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||
about thirty years ago, and it left a great impress upon our
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||
thinking. One of the great progenitors of that vogue was William
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James, the psychologist. Surely be has a right to think in this
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||
realm of metaphysics, because he is a scientist of a psychological
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||
turn, as Mr. Barnes is. Then it was carried on by Professor George
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||
Burman Foster of the University of Chicago, very able in
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||
philosophy. Pragmatism was this: that is true which functions
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serviceably for humanity; that proposition is likely to be correct
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||
which works well in human life.
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Now, I recognize the limitations of that philosophy. I know
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||
that it has been tried through a generation and has not been
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||
established as infallible and absolutely true in all particulars.
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||
Nevertheless, there is a modicum of truth in it, that that thing is
|
||
likely to be true which works well in human life. If it functions
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||
serviceably for humanity, then the inference is that more than
|
||
likely it is in harmony with the logic of affairs and of events.
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||
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||
Now, the theistic philosophy is the only thing that has worked
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||
in human society at all. There never has been any other philosophy
|
||
tried out among men, either in a small way or in a large way, in
|
||
social construction, except the theistic belief. Well, you say,
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||
there is an experiment going on right now over in Russia, in
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||
establishing an atheistic society. Once again, the actions of the
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||
Russians speak louder than their words, over and over. We all know
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||
of a Lenin cult. They are not very far from worshiping as their
|
||
Messiah the founder of their republic, the Soviet Union, Lenin. And
|
||
he is well worth believing in, for he was a very great and fearless
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||
man. But Russia, better than almost anybody else, is showing up the
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||
impossibility of the human mind resting in atheism. In Russia today
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||
there is an enthusiasm for the social program, for the communistic
|
||
regime, that is nothing less than a worship, a devotion to the
|
||
cause, that is profoundly theistic in its very spirit, a
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||
sacrificial devotion that amounts to worship.
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||
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||
Now, we see men acting as if they were theists, even while
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||
with their lives they express agnosticism and occasionally atheism;
|
||
not often atheism, but usually agnosticism. My young son, fifteen
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||
years old, came home from high school one day -- he was then a
|
||
sophomore -- and said, "I have got through with all this old stuff,
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||
Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
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4
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||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
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I am an atheist." I didn't say anything then. Days passed on and
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||
weeks; when a favorable opportunity came and we were having a good
|
||
chin-chin, I talked things all out with him. He said, "Maybe I am
|
||
not an atheist after all. Maybe I am an agnostic." I said, "That
|
||
indicates that you are growing, that you don't think you know it
|
||
all. I thought you thought you knew it all; but if you have reached
|
||
a position where you are doubtful about things, or you have reached
|
||
a position where you call yourself an agnostic -- an honorable term
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||
-- you are growing." He has got over being a sophomore, and still
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||
he is an agnostic.
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I see in people who claim agnosticism a great many who would
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||
like to see if there is any purpose behind the world, if life is
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||
going anywhere; and yet they all act all the time as though there
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||
were a purpose, as though law does reign and not chaos, as though
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||
something can be done to affect the machine for the good of the
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human being; so they set to work very vigorously and determinedly
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to make the machine work for their benefit.
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Faith in a God Through Nature
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I often travel out in the country in an automobile and I have
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seen some of the days of this springtime when the world is white
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with April, if not with May, and I have seen the works of the
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farming people. They act as if they believe in the procession of
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the equinoxes, in the return of spring, of summer, of harvest and
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fruitage. They go on that basis. They consider that there is logic
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in the events of the world in which they are a part. They may not
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be able to explain it; don't stop to think, perhaps, that there is
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a lawgiver behind the law; but they act just as if they thought the
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law was working just the same. How do I know? Because I see it.
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They make careful preparation. There I see the hillside dotted with
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white leghorns like great flower petals; I see the fuzzy balls as
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big as my hand, chasing around on toothpicks after their fussy old
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mothers, the hens; and I think maybe I can get an invitation later
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down to Girard or in that neighborhood. And then I see little
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calves, fresh born -- I saw one lying one day under a hedge-row; it
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||
must have been born that morning, its sides still wet and the old
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||
mother standing licking them; I see little mule colts, even out in
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Kansas I see queer and wobbly mule colts, with bodies about as big
|
||
as a hobby-horse, and ears and legs as long as they will ever get
|
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to be. Now, how do those things all come about? Just a happen-so?
|
||
I see the corn come up, as big as my hand, and the wheat in head
|
||
and the oats ready to cut, along early in June, Those farmers,
|
||
because they have believed that the harvest was coming, that they
|
||
could get something out of their fields, have prepared this land
|
||
for the resurgence of fresh, new life in the spring. They are
|
||
putting their trust in the creative power that is back of it all.
|
||
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||
Then I see men and women bearing life when it is scarcely to
|
||
be borne. In the midst of weariness, pain, suffering,
|
||
disillusionment, and lives wrecked and broken, I see them pulling
|
||
their belts tighter and saying, "It is going to be better tomorrow.
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||
I will be better tomorrow. Things are going to be better with me
|
||
after a little while." And they thrust out their jaws and clench
|
||
their teeth and go ahead. I take off my hat to the courage of
|
||
humanity that can endure so bravely and so well. They act as if
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|
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Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
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5
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IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
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they believe that there is an order in it all; that it is not a
|
||
machine grinding us to powder, wrecking and destroying our poor,
|
||
little lives; that nature is something else than red in tooth and
|
||
claw; they anticipate something better to come tomorrow, and
|
||
tomorrow.
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||
|
||
Last night I saw Otis Skinner playing the part of a one-
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||
hundred-year-old man, and the most beautiful part in the play is
|
||
when he sits and looks out musingly and says, "I have lived here so
|
||
long because I liked it. Ahead of me was a little light burning. I
|
||
looked forward to this day when my children and my grandchildren
|
||
and my great-grandchildren would be coming to celebrate my one-
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||
hundredth birthday." And then he says, "As this light has come, I
|
||
look forward to another light, dimmer and farther off, that will
|
||
keep me." He adds, "I want to see my great great grandchildren!"
|
||
Here it is, human life looking forward, always something tomorrow,
|
||
and tomorrow, and tomorrow, and it is going to be better and
|
||
better. We believe in life, even when we think we do not. We
|
||
believe in its logicality, in the reign of laws; we believe in its
|
||
purpose, that it is going somewhere and getting somewhere.
|
||
|
||
We would not be able to lie down and sleep at night if we did
|
||
not believe that there were an over-arching power, something I
|
||
cannot define. I don't know what you call it. Call it the Over-
|
||
soul, with Emerson, if you like; call it Father, as Jesus called
|
||
it, and as most other nations and religions have called it; call it
|
||
what you please, we could not sleep if we did not have an
|
||
unconscious dependence upon that power. Suppose you did not believe
|
||
that the sun would rise tomorrow morning; or suppose that you had
|
||
grave doubts of it, or agreed that the probabilities were against
|
||
its coming up tomorrow, or that there would be any tomorrow. You
|
||
could not sleep any more than a man that was going to face the
|
||
electric chair at seven o'clock in the morning; you would pace up
|
||
and down your bedroom all night long, unable to rest. If you didn't
|
||
believe that some-how some power would bring the sun back again
|
||
over the eastern horizon -- I know that is not scientific; no, that
|
||
the world would turn during the night toward the sun over on the
|
||
east -- you could not sleep.
|
||
|
||
The Comfort of Belief in a God
|
||
|
||
Then all this life of beauty and cleanliness which is embedded
|
||
in us. Now, in this springtime we are all getting out our paint
|
||
brushes and whitewash brushes and whitening up the fences -- not in
|
||
the city, but in the country. If we have a back yard, we are
|
||
cleaning it up; if we don't, the Boy Scouts will come tumbling over
|
||
the back fence and remind us of it. It is the duty of a citizen to
|
||
clean up, make his place just as beautiful and ornamental as he
|
||
can. A chap said to me one time, "When I get way down I have only
|
||
two things to do, get drunk or put on dress clothes." I knew that
|
||
the first was all talk. He had never been drunk -- he may have been
|
||
just a little "lit-up" but he had never been drunk, I know. He was
|
||
talking with respect to the old Greek gods; it was either Bacchus
|
||
on the one hand or Apollo on the other with him. In 1917, working
|
||
with the British army, to my astonishment I found out that there
|
||
was a regulation that every Tommie had to shave every morning, no
|
||
matter whether he had water to shave in or only mud; whether in the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
|
||
barracks or in the trenches, he had to scrape his face, and they
|
||
came out rosy and fresh, even in the trench period. Better
|
||
orderliness, cleanliness. Water has an effect upon our lives.
|
||
Pragmatic philosophy, undoubtedly; works serviceably for humanity.
|
||
People think there is something back of it all, a great artist,
|
||
creating beauty and art.
|
||
|
||
If we didn't believe that there was a great power directing
|
||
eternal destiny, how should we even be able to stand by the side of
|
||
those we love better than ourselves and see them slipping through
|
||
our fingers, out into the unknown? Or how should we ever be able to
|
||
recover after such a loss? Have you been through it? Something more
|
||
precious than your own life ebbing away, and you clutch at it and
|
||
try to hold it back, and you can't. And then you see the green door
|
||
of the earth swinging over it and you say "Good-bye." How can you
|
||
go on living, how is it possible to go on living? Why don't we
|
||
destroy ourselves when losses like that come unless deep down in
|
||
our life somewhere we have the consciousness that "it is not all of
|
||
life to live nor all of death to die"; that back of it is
|
||
beneficence, kindliness; that there is more of good than evil; that
|
||
the problem of good is just as great as the problem of evil for us
|
||
to solve. In our philosophy, consciously or unconsciously, that is
|
||
what we believe, and we act as if we believed it, no matter what
|
||
our words.
|
||
|
||
And so the purpose of all human thinking and all human
|
||
knowledge is, I think, to bring the human mind at rest somewhere.
|
||
I don't think the human mind can rest in an unexplained universe.
|
||
The purpose of all life is to find equilibrium, rest. The
|
||
psychologists now, in their most modern researches, are teaching us
|
||
that this is the end and aim of existence: consciously or
|
||
unconsciously to find rest, peace, confidence. Down in the lower
|
||
strata of our nature sometimes we manifest very, very queer urges,
|
||
such as the desire to go clear back to our mother's breast to rest
|
||
again. And the psychologist tells that we go farther than that,
|
||
that we yearn for the rest of the mother's womb, the prenatal rest,
|
||
for the warmth and the repose and the unconsciousness that preceded
|
||
birth.
|
||
|
||
Those are results of recent scientific investigation. And if
|
||
that is true, then all of human kind, with all of its thinking, is
|
||
seeking to find rest, equilibrium, calm. And I defy anybody to find
|
||
rest in an unexplained and inexplicable universe. Now, maybe Mr.
|
||
Haldeman-Julius can do it. Let us see.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Negative Argument
|
||
By E. Haldeman-Julius
|
||
|
||
I agree that an explanation of the universe is necessary for
|
||
the satisfaction of the mind. But different minds demand different
|
||
explanations. The realistic-minded individual seeks for proofs, for
|
||
scientific tests, for reasonable conclusions, for merciless
|
||
examination of all assumptions. He is willing to suspend judgment
|
||
in those domains where he still lacks complete knowledge.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
|
||
On the other hand, we find the so-called "spiritual"-minded
|
||
individual who believes because he has been taught to accept
|
||
certain notions about God, because he has grown accustomed to
|
||
relying on his emotions for opinions instead of the full use of his
|
||
rational faculties. Such tender-minded, non-realistic individuals
|
||
usually seek out those domains of knowledge that are still
|
||
unexplored and place their God in that environment of mystery and
|
||
darkness.
|
||
|
||
Only a few centuries ago man knew little of the world in which
|
||
he lived, so it was his habit to have his God right around the
|
||
corner. As knowledge grew, God was sent farther and farther into
|
||
space. Now it seems, with God driven from pillar to post until a
|
||
new hiding place is desperately required, a few believers have
|
||
resorted to invisible electrons. They have tucked their God away --
|
||
temporarily -- in that still uncharted world. But it is safe to
|
||
predict that in another generation or two man will understand the
|
||
electrons, and perhaps the ether beyond the electrons, and these
|
||
will also show the operation of natural, mechanical processes that
|
||
do not admit any agency outside and above matter. It is typical of
|
||
the theological mind to claim as its sphere the outermost, receding
|
||
points of darkness and ignorance. As knowledge grows, such centers
|
||
of theism disappear.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Does Chance, Mechanism or
|
||
Naturalism Offer an
|
||
Explanation?
|
||
|
||
There is strong authority for the idea that man, like the
|
||
lower animals, is a mechanism -- a machine -- and that the whole
|
||
universe is mechanical. The philosophy of materialism has not been
|
||
discredited. Dr. Jenkins brings in Descartes' argument for God.
|
||
Does he not know that Descartes' reasoning included the idea that
|
||
all animals were machines, except man? Descartes was really the
|
||
first of the modern mechanists, though in a jumbled, incoherent
|
||
way. He separated man from the animals because he did not have the
|
||
benefit of Darwin's myth-destroying discoveries in biology. Darwin
|
||
laid the foundation for the truth of evolution, for the
|
||
comparatively simple conclusion that man is nothing more than a
|
||
distant cousin of the apes.
|
||
|
||
Descartes also suggested that the mind is "spiritual" and the
|
||
body material, and that God had decreed neither should be
|
||
influenced by the other -- that they were separate entities. In
|
||
this he lacked the knowledge given us later by psychologists, who
|
||
have shown that mind is merely the function of the brain and that
|
||
the brain is a material substance. One might as well argue that
|
||
digestion is a separate reality, when the fact is that physiology
|
||
corrects us so simply and shows that digestion is merely the
|
||
stomach in action, a purely materialistic, physical function.
|
||
|
||
To hold that this non-material substance (as Descartes
|
||
described the brain) comes from God, and that this substance's
|
||
picture of a God must be based on a reality, is to utter the
|
||
sheerest fancy of formless words. There must first be evidence that
|
||
the brain is not a material thing.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
|
||
Yes, chance, mechanism, naturalism, materialism do offer
|
||
interesting grounds for the belief that there is nothing in matter
|
||
that is above matter, that what we call power or force is the
|
||
result of matter in motion -- that and nothing more -- and the
|
||
further belief that the materials of our limitless, immeasurable
|
||
universe perhaps always existed.
|
||
|
||
It seems more reasonable to picture something like ether
|
||
always having been instead of imagining its creation out of nothing
|
||
by something outside nature and matter. That this is still a
|
||
mystery I do not deny. But I do insist that it is not solved by the
|
||
theistic assumption that matter was created at the word or the will
|
||
of a God or Gods. Such a belief implies a First Cause, which is a
|
||
logical absurdity. For this notion has it that everything is the
|
||
effect of some cause, that a cause is the effect of some other
|
||
cause and that nature works back from effect to cause and from
|
||
cause to effect until it rests upon a Prime Mover, a First Cause --
|
||
which, according to this peculiar logic, assumes that there can be
|
||
a cause that was not caused, and that that First Cause was God.
|
||
This brings up the logical question: Who made God? If everything
|
||
must have a cause, then the First Cause must be caused. To say that
|
||
this First Cause always existed is to deny the basic assumption of
|
||
the theory and to provoke the rejoinder that if it is reasonable to
|
||
assume a First Cause as having always existed, why is it
|
||
unreasonable to assume that the materials of the universe always
|
||
existed?
|
||
|
||
In passing, I want to add the thought that there is no basis
|
||
in science for the notion that causes and effects can be traced
|
||
backward to a simple First Cause. Each thing that seems to be an
|
||
effect cannot be said to have a single cause, but the causes and
|
||
the effects are so interrelated as to be beyond anyone's power to
|
||
separate them. For example, let me stand in the center of a room
|
||
and hear a telephone bell. I walk over, pick up the receiver, and
|
||
say "Hello." What was the cause of that act? Was it the fact that
|
||
I had ear drums, that I bad legs to carry me to that telephone,
|
||
that I had fingers to pick up the receiver, that I had an apparatus
|
||
for speaking that enabled me to say "Hello," that someone put the
|
||
telephone there, that someone invented it, that someone rang the
|
||
bell, that someone told someone to ring the bell? You see the
|
||
complications. If we can't get at the immediate cause of my
|
||
answering the telephone, how can we search back to a First Cause?
|
||
The whole thing is an illogical fancy and has been rejected by
|
||
thinkers for five hundred years. Even some theologians frequently
|
||
annihilate this argument before presenting their own equally
|
||
vulnerable arguments. The idea of the First Cause came originally
|
||
from Aristotle and then through the Catholic Church, which found it
|
||
necessary to buttress its faith with something akin to logic; this
|
||
argument had the appearance of logic -- but on examination that
|
||
poor semblance faded. My point is: We can conceive of an endless,
|
||
eternal cycle of causes, but we cannot conceive of a First Cause.
|
||
|
||
Just how the stuff of the universe came into existence, if it
|
||
ever "Came," I do not know. But that lack of knowledge should not
|
||
be considered a good reason for imaginative flights, for baseless
|
||
assumptions. We all recognize the factor of chance in many things.
|
||
We are familiar with games of chance. Bertrand Russell tells in one
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
|
||
of his lectures that double sixes in dice will come once in about
|
||
thirty-six throws. That is a law of chance. When a thing acts
|
||
mechanically, when it always does the same thing in nature, we have
|
||
a different problem. If the forces of nature, acting through their
|
||
material properties, always behave in a certain way, we are seeing
|
||
a machine at work. If it were to be eccentric, or changeable, or
|
||
whimsical -- then we could say, perhaps, that some mind had shown
|
||
itself at work in nature.
|
||
|
||
Are the Difficulties of Atheism
|
||
Insuperable?
|
||
|
||
An atheist is one who rejects the assumptions of theism. The
|
||
atheist says he has good reasons for rejecting theism. It is an
|
||
explanation, so called, that does not satisfy his mind. He finds
|
||
that the difficulties of theism are insuperable. He analyzes the
|
||
First Cause argument, the argument for God from Design, from
|
||
Purpose, from Law implying a Lawgiver, the argument from Justice
|
||
and Moral Reasons. He finds them, each and all, a tissue of
|
||
assumptions and inconsistencies. He rejects them on the score of
|
||
logic and reason.
|
||
|
||
It is for theism to bring out its proofs for a God, not for
|
||
the atheist to prove that there is no God. If the theist has no
|
||
valid arguments, the atheist rests his case. To illustrate this:
|
||
Some man says that the earth is a hollow sphere and that at its
|
||
heart is a strange world, which he may fantastically describe. I
|
||
say that there are conclusive evidences in science that the center
|
||
of the earth is solid. He then says: "Prove to me that the earth's
|
||
center is not hollow and inhabited." And there you are. Proof --
|
||
disproof -- is a question of reason and evidence.
|
||
|
||
Dr. Jenkins is an evolutionary creationist, as I understand
|
||
his argument. He believes with Descartes that God gave the universe
|
||
a push and set it in motion, leaving it to finish itself and go
|
||
eternally on its way. That, I claim, is a bold assumption. There is
|
||
no evidence for that position. But you say: "Who made the world?"
|
||
I answer: Prove your statement that the world was "made." Doubtless
|
||
you will say: "Ah, it stands to reason -- it had to be made." But
|
||
that is an assumption. Science does not know the meaning of the
|
||
word "made." We know of things being fabricated, but not "made."
|
||
And to trace the universe back, with a thin wavering line of
|
||
rhetoric, to a First Cause is to evade the question.
|
||
|
||
If you believe in Creation, then you must believe the Creator
|
||
was created, and then you get something out of nothing. And if you
|
||
are going to prove that -- to attempt that amazing proof -- then
|
||
you are going to have a pretty hard job.
|
||
|
||
|
||
How Man's Knowledge
|
||
Is Growing
|
||
|
||
All that philosophy implies is that we seek an explanation.
|
||
But I agree that an explanation is possible and that it is likely
|
||
to come. It is only on this point that I disagree with the
|
||
agnostics who dogmatically say that the mystery of life is
|
||
unsolvable. I do not accept this theory. Knowledge is growing every
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
|
||
day. Man conquers new domains each decade. Who is to say there is
|
||
a limit short of complete knowledge? Judging by the advances man
|
||
has made as a seeker after facts, it seems logical to conclude that
|
||
the day will come when man will be able to explain every act of
|
||
nature. And judging by the trend of his achievements thus far, it
|
||
is safe to say that supernaturalism or theism will not enter at any
|
||
point of the survey. It may be hundreds of years before the
|
||
explanation of science is complete; I am not trying to set any
|
||
date. But remember that man as a thinking animal is a recent
|
||
phenomenon. He has been using his head logically for only about
|
||
2,500 or 3,000 years. Science itself is less than 2,500 years old,
|
||
and out of that time you must discount the Dark Ages, a thousand
|
||
years of intellectual stagnation.
|
||
|
||
I am an optimist. I believe that man will never again
|
||
surrender to the forces of obscurantism. And this moving history of
|
||
man -- his cultural, scientific and economic history -- proves one
|
||
thing with bold significance: as man grows in intelligence, as he
|
||
learns to think for himself, as he grasps newer and greater secrets
|
||
from nature, his primitive fears disappear, his faith in
|
||
supernaturalism declines, his belief in Gods dies down. There is
|
||
more intelligence today than ever before in man's entire history.
|
||
There is also less of God in man's mind. The lesson is a simple
|
||
one. The growth of intelligence means the growth of skepticism.
|
||
|
||
It has been a slow evolution, but it has been a fairly steady
|
||
one. The process is being accelerated today. Man's mind is
|
||
achieving a quicker pace. Man's intellectual progress is a certain
|
||
abandonment of myths about God and supernaturalism. In the
|
||
evolution of mind I see the growth of skepticism; away from theism
|
||
to a mild form of deism; away from deism to agnosticism; and now I
|
||
see still greater progress -- the abandonment of all beliefs in
|
||
supernaturalism. And if you will make an honest survey of history,
|
||
you will be struck by the consistent fact that most of the world's
|
||
progress can be traced to those individuals who were brave enough
|
||
to defy conventional-minded religionists. The houses of God have
|
||
never been hospitable to progress. They have always been centers of
|
||
obscurantism, superstition and reaction.
|
||
|
||
The Starting Point of Descartes --
|
||
"Personality." Does the Logic
|
||
of Personality Lead to Theism?
|
||
|
||
It is interesting to note that the history of the church shows
|
||
that it has contributed little to theistic thinking. It has been
|
||
the source of no arguments for theism, so far as I know. The
|
||
Catholic Church had to go back to Aristotle, Plato and Socrates for
|
||
its arguments in support of the God idea. Other arguments had to be
|
||
taken from lay philosophers, like Lord Bacon, Descartes, Spinoza,
|
||
Kant. Each, particularly Kant, played havoc with the theistic ideas
|
||
of other philosophers, including the Church's school-men. I merely
|
||
throw out this suggestion to emphasize the thought that the church
|
||
has always been too active as a business enterprise to give much
|
||
thought to the validity of its beliefs.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
|
||
The theistic philosophers have shown themselves to be wrong --
|
||
each succeeding philosopher disputing the arguments of those who
|
||
went before, until we reach Kant, who killed off all their
|
||
arguments, then became frightened at his temerity and forthwith
|
||
invented an entirely new argument known as the Moral Law. If you
|
||
want to become an atheist, read Kant thoroughly, and you will get
|
||
rid of ninety percent of your theism; then read philosophers who
|
||
came after Kant, and you will get rid of the other ten percent. Of
|
||
course, this argument of Descartes' could not escape Kant's
|
||
philosophical axe. He struck off its head neatly in his Critique of
|
||
Pure Reason. Descartes' "ontological" proof never had any standing.
|
||
As I understand him, existence is something that is perfection in
|
||
itself, from which it must follow that God, being something
|
||
completely perfect, must be a reality.
|
||
|
||
Descartes' argument is best answered by stating it -- for its
|
||
absurdity is obvious. "I think, therefore I am," said Descartes.
|
||
Thus it followed, in his reasoning, that as he thought of a God,
|
||
therefore a God must exist. That can only mean one thing: that
|
||
belief in an idea makes it true -- that an idea doesn't have to be
|
||
proved, but all one needs is to have the concept. Of course, that
|
||
is just as good a proof for atheism as it is for theism. It is just
|
||
as good a proof for a personal God as for an abstract modernistic
|
||
God. It is just as good a proof for a personal Devil, with horns,
|
||
as for a personal God. And plainly, in the light of common sense,
|
||
it isn't the shadow of a proof for anything.
|
||
|
||
Are all ideas that men have devoutly held, all notions in
|
||
which men have believed and which men have even died for, therefore
|
||
true? Surely not. What Descartes actually said, shorn of all its
|
||
involved philosophical lingo, was this: "Whatever I think is true."
|
||
Imagine it! What I think is true. What Dr. Jenkins thinks is true.
|
||
What Mrs. Eddy thought was true. What John Wesley, who believed in
|
||
witchcraft, thought was true. What everybody thinks is true --
|
||
which means that truth is equivalent to the sum of all absurdities.
|
||
|
||
I am sure that Dr. Jenkins does not believe in a hell; but,
|
||
according to Descartes' logic, Dante's hell -- a vision as vivid as
|
||
anyone ever had -- must be a reality. Dr. Jenkins doesn't believe
|
||
this -- he can't really believe in this antiquated reasoning of
|
||
Descartes -- no thinking man could believe it. Its only use, and
|
||
what a Poor use it is, can be as a mere confusing trick of
|
||
rhetoric. It is very sick logic, deformed logic, the sheer denial
|
||
of logic.
|
||
|
||
Furthermore, this principle of Descartes plainly begs the
|
||
question of the nature of ideas. it ignores the source of ideas in
|
||
analogies from the world around us; the idea of perfection, for
|
||
example, being, when all is said, merely a notion of something
|
||
indefinitely and vaguely better than what we have. What is a
|
||
perfect being? What is meant by a perfect life? What is meant by
|
||
the idea of perfection? It is an idea which cannot possibly be
|
||
stated in final, concrete, realizable terms. Some ideas are direct
|
||
reflections of things visibly before us. They are ideas that can be
|
||
tested. They are ideas that will work. Other ideas are indirect.
|
||
Some ideas are so remote and vague that they can scarcely be called
|
||
ideas and the God idea is a classic example of such remoteness.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
|
||
Many ideas are so tangled up with analogies, far-fetched
|
||
inferences, repetitions and assumptions that to speak of them as
|
||
clear (even though they may be stated in an orderly form of words)
|
||
is to violate the meaning of language.
|
||
|
||
Even on the basis of Descartes' own argument, is it
|
||
conceivable that he had a picture or a consciousness or an idea of
|
||
a God that was even dimly comparable to the picture or
|
||
consciousness or idea that he had of himself? Obviously not. His
|
||
idea of God was an abstraction or it was a mere personal simile --
|
||
a God greater than a man, a God-mind greater than the human mind,
|
||
and so on. To prove God's existence by his own -- in presuming to
|
||
attempt that, Descartes shows the pit-fall which philosophy spreads
|
||
for those who think in words and not in real images. If Descartes
|
||
had any picture of a God in his mind, it was probably the picture
|
||
of a being who had all the virtues and none of the defects of
|
||
Descartes himself -- a bigger and better Descartes.
|
||
|
||
The Universality of Theism?
|
||
The Belief of Great Minds?
|
||
Modern Science and Theism
|
||
|
||
It is not long since theists argued that belief in a God was
|
||
universal. They now say, "All but universal," because it has been
|
||
found that numerous tribes of primitive men do not believe in a
|
||
God, that such a belief comes much later in the scale. But this
|
||
knowledge given to us by the ethnologists did not succeed in
|
||
killing off the argument in its entirety; it still lingers.
|
||
|
||
But let me, for the sake of Dr. Jenkins' argument, grant that
|
||
belief in theism is universal. Is this to be accepted as a valid
|
||
argument in favor of the existence of a God? I think not. The
|
||
theists add that while error may be local and occasional, universal
|
||
agreement is something altogether different; it is man in the mass
|
||
using reason to discover some great truth, in this case the truth
|
||
of the existence of a God. This argument, used in this late day,
|
||
shows the poverty of intellect to be found among our theistic
|
||
apologists. It is unworthy of serious consideration, except to
|
||
remark that until man reaches a pretty far stage in history he is
|
||
almost certain to be universally wrong on most subjects of an
|
||
intellectual nature. According to this argument, we should have to
|
||
believe today that the sun swings around the earth and that the
|
||
earth is flat, for those were universal beliefs for thousands of
|
||
years. Religion might take some comfort from this argument if the
|
||
intelligence of the world today supported its position. But the
|
||
opposite is the fact. Religion is dead at the top; it is dying
|
||
rapidly at the bottom. The intelligence of the world is
|
||
relentlessly -- and cheerfully -- deserting the God idea.
|
||
|
||
Dr. Jenkins argues that most great minds in history have
|
||
embraced theism. This is not stating the case quite accurately. The
|
||
history of man's intellect shows that with the development of
|
||
reason and the spread of knowledge, he grows more skeptical; he
|
||
works closer and closer to atheistic conclusions. Knowledge
|
||
develops; it does not come with the climax of a Creator making a
|
||
universe. Historical perspective is essential to grasp the picture.
|
||
Great minds were convinced, even before modern science had
|
||
discovered such a growing case for atheism, that the God idea was
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
|
||
false. Almost without exception, the great minds have certainly
|
||
rejected all the ideas which have been derived by religion from the
|
||
idea of God. The great minds, again almost without exception, have
|
||
denied the validity of the popular reasons and even of the best
|
||
philosophical reasons for belief in a God. Great minds, let me add,
|
||
have helped to build, from age to age, the knowledge which in a
|
||
logical, steady, inexorable evolution of thought leads to atheism.
|
||
|
||
But Dr. Jenkins says that modern science is moving rather
|
||
strongly in the direction of theism. This is not true, according to
|
||
the figures quoted by Professor J.H. Leuba, in his study entitled
|
||
Belief in God and Immortality, a most useful and important work.
|
||
First Professor Leuba went to one thousand students with questions
|
||
regarding their belief in a God and in immortality. He then put his
|
||
questions to professors. Among one thousand students, Professor
|
||
Leuba found eighty-two percent of the girl students and fifty-six
|
||
percent of the boy students believing in a God; and among the
|
||
professors he found only thirteen percent of the leading
|
||
psychologists who would admit belief in a God. Education does not
|
||
help theism.
|
||
|
||
But let us examine Leuba's figures more closely. Taking the
|
||
greater scientists (more than a thousand in number), Leuba found
|
||
the following believers in a God: physicists, 34 percent;
|
||
historians, 32 percent; sociologists, 19 percent; biologists, 16
|
||
percent; and psychologists, 13 percent.
|
||
|
||
You will notice that our theists, in seeking support for their
|
||
position among the scientists, usually draw on physicists like
|
||
Millikan and Eddington. These men are not competent to render a
|
||
conclusion with the same authority as a biologist or a
|
||
psychologist. Theistic questions do not enter their sphere. At
|
||
certain points, these questions do concern the psychologists. When
|
||
the theist argues that man has a religious instinct, psychologists
|
||
recognize that this argument is to be tested in their field of
|
||
research. As students of the emotions and instincts, they seek for
|
||
this "instinct" which theists attribute to man. But they cannot
|
||
find it. And it is among these psychologists that we find only
|
||
thirteen percent who accept theism. So that argument fails.
|
||
|
||
Where Is "the Finger of God"?
|
||
|
||
Biologists, who study the origin and processes of life, are
|
||
about as skeptical as the psychologists. They cannot find "the
|
||
finger of God" in the evolution of life. In these two fields of
|
||
science which bear most directly upon theism, we find belief in a
|
||
God is not considered a satisfactory explanation. As Leuba's
|
||
questionnaire was sent out fourteen years ago, it is safe to say
|
||
that the percent-age has fallen still lower, even though physicists
|
||
like Millikan and Eddington pay peculiar and illogical homage to
|
||
the theistic element. They take a religion that is without
|
||
supernaturalism and a science that they limit by denying scientists
|
||
the right to encroach on what they claim should be the proper
|
||
domain of the theologian; by twisting science and emasculating
|
||
religion they affect an unreal armistice. But the war goes on just
|
||
the same, and science goes ahead each day to new victories, while
|
||
religion falls before new defeats. It is my opinion that the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
|
||
psychologist, by virtue of his special science, is more qualified
|
||
to discuss problems of theism, because some of the arguments of the
|
||
theists encroach upon his science. For example, Dr. Jenkins made
|
||
use of Descartes' exploded argument that starts with thought ("I
|
||
think, therefore I exist") and leaps to the weird conclusion that
|
||
because a person thinks of a God it must follow that God exists.
|
||
This notion was promulgated in the first half of the seventeenth
|
||
century, before there was such a thing as the science of
|
||
psychology. Psychology had to meet this so-called argument, and
|
||
that it dismissed it curtly is to the credit of the psychologists,
|
||
for they, along with the philosophers, showed that it is quite
|
||
common for us to have ideas that do not correspond, save by false
|
||
analogy, to real objects -- centaurs, for example. My mind can
|
||
picture the idea of a being half man and half horse, but no
|
||
psychologist would accept that as proof of the existence of a
|
||
centaur.
|
||
|
||
Since theism touches psychology at so many points, it follows
|
||
that the observations of the important psychologists are more
|
||
worthy of respect than arguments emanating from physicists whose
|
||
training is limited exclusively to the study of matter. These few
|
||
physicists who speak favorably of theism are -- in that respect --
|
||
eccentric. It is to be noted, furthermore, that these physicists do
|
||
not offer any proof of theism and that their laboratory methods,
|
||
which have resulted in such important knowledge of material things,
|
||
have not produced the slightest evidence for a God. At the most,
|
||
even a Millikan or an Eddington has only said that there is a good
|
||
deal of the mystery of life which is yet unsolved. No intelligent
|
||
man denies this. It is indeed a statement of the obvious. And when
|
||
they talk about theism, about a God, Eddington and Millikan are
|
||
only guessing. They are deserting the scientific method and taking
|
||
refuge, at this outermost point, in mysticism.
|
||
|
||
Let me say this: the opinion of a scientist in favor of theism
|
||
is worth nothing unless that scientist can offer scientific
|
||
evidence in support of theism. Does Eddington offer any evidence of
|
||
physics that there is a God? He does not. To the farthest point
|
||
that science has reached, the case for atheism is strong -- it is
|
||
the only satisfactory, sound explanation -- and the case for theism
|
||
is very, very feeble. On the whole, the world of scientific thought
|
||
is atheistic. The few whimsical scientists who use theistic
|
||
language are seen plainly to be forgetting their character as
|
||
scientists and behaving in a temper of quite common fallacy. When
|
||
Eddington speaks of definite things in physics, for example, we
|
||
follow him respectfully. He is talking about his special subject.
|
||
He is offering facts, not fancies. But when he says that the inner
|
||
conviction that a God exists is a proof of the reality of God --
|
||
then be is clumsily stepping into the domain of the psychologists,
|
||
and I assure you that there isn't a first-rate psychologist who
|
||
doesn't smile at this unoriginal and unscientific argument of
|
||
Eddington.
|
||
|
||
Theism Collapses with Theology
|
||
|
||
In shirking the details of theism, Dr. Jenkins illustrates the
|
||
necessity of vagueness in defending God. I grant that the idea of
|
||
theism does not mean the doctrines of Christianity, nor revelation,
|
||
nor heaven and hell -- and all that rigmarole. However, theism is
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
|
||
the essential basis of all these superstitions; and without the
|
||
belief in God, these superstitions could not exist. That is why it
|
||
is important to show that the idea of God is quite as baseless,
|
||
quite as superstitious in its essence, as any of the outmoded
|
||
concepts of theology which Dr. Jenkins agrees to discard.
|
||
|
||
It must be noted, however, as a curious and relevant
|
||
circumstance, that Dr. Jenkins believes certainly in the existence
|
||
of a being or a power of which he knows nothing certainly whatever.
|
||
He waives details -- which means, after all, that he waives
|
||
knowledge of God. Is God the reality -- the great and necessary and
|
||
unshakable reality -- that Dr. Jenkins contends? Then surely a
|
||
great deal should be known about God. The reality should have some
|
||
features upon which men, who have claimed all these centuries to
|
||
study God and his attributes, could reasonably and clearly agree.
|
||
But no -- Dr. Jenkins knows there is a God, but he is singularly
|
||
lacking in knowledge of this God. His knowledge is, we perceive,
|
||
only a form of words.
|
||
|
||
I am not asking Dr. Jenkins to give me a complete description
|
||
of God, but I think he should have something really definite and
|
||
demonstrable in the way of knowledge about his God. If he replies
|
||
that we see God in nature, I say that he is only calling nature by
|
||
another name; he is using as proof of his theistic assumption that
|
||
very assumption itself, alone and unsupported. No -- all of the
|
||
fancy names men have for God are merely the names of forces or
|
||
principles or realities which we recognize apart from the idea of
|
||
God. They don't reveal God. God doesn't explain them. The moment a
|
||
theologian tries to be definite about God, we find that he is
|
||
simply fastening the name of God upon something else -- upon
|
||
nature, upon life, upon the universe, upon the electron.
|
||
|
||
There is -- I make this statement carefully -- no such thing
|
||
as a clear, independent idea of God. It is all reflection and
|
||
analogy, it is all a super-fluity and mixture of terms, and its
|
||
only result is confusion. Details? Oh, certainly, Dr. Jenkins is
|
||
discreet in avoiding them. His God is an insubstantial mirage of
|
||
"the infinites and the indefinites." It is a fact, again, that
|
||
theism does not stand and never has stood as a solitary idea. It is
|
||
the basis of innumerable dogmas and superstitions. It is the idea
|
||
which has assuredly led men into the most fantastic tricks of
|
||
thought and belief. It is the idea which has been most sadly and
|
||
violently at war with the civilized effort to understand reality
|
||
and to find light and progress in the world.
|
||
|
||
Theism, says Dr. Jenkins, is not to be confused with theology.
|
||
But all that this means is that the theological idea of God does
|
||
not necessarily include all other theological ideas. After all,
|
||
theology is the deliberate and very ambitious effort to understand
|
||
God. To speak of God, in the tone of serious belief, is to speak
|
||
theologically -- only Dr. Jenkins, as a theologian, doesn't go as
|
||
far as some others. His theology is less in quantity -- and it is
|
||
just as vague, or rather it is more vague and fully as
|
||
unreasonable. I ought to point out, too, that the arguments which
|
||
Dr. Jenkins advances in behalf of theism are the identical
|
||
arguments which theologians have advanced (after borrowing them
|
||
from the philosophers); that they are arguments which come
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
|
||
familiarly and quite as unconvincingly from the lips of men who
|
||
believe in inspiration, revelation, immortality and all those
|
||
details which Dr. Jenkins judiciously sets aside as unpromising.
|
||
Theology depends upon theism. If theism is an unsupported theory,
|
||
theology collapses. The two must share the same fate.
|
||
|
||
The Fallacious Argument of
|
||
"Law and a Lawgiver"
|
||
|
||
We now come to the theistic argument that where there is law
|
||
there must be a lawmaker. We are told that the orderly, regular
|
||
movements of the planetary system, for instance, prove "natural
|
||
laws," and the conclusion is asserted that these natural laws imply
|
||
the existence of a lawgiver. One could not expect to go through a
|
||
discussion of theism without meeting this fallacious and untenable
|
||
piece of reasoning. It has been dismissed as unsound by competent
|
||
thinkers, but the argument persists,
|
||
|
||
The fundamental error is found in the theist's habit of
|
||
confusing a human law with a natural "law." A legislature passes a
|
||
law saying that after a certain date it shall be illegal to behave
|
||
in a certain way, to have liquor, for instance. If you break this
|
||
law, and are not caught, nothing happens except the usual next
|
||
morning headache. If you are caught, you may be sent to the
|
||
penitentiary. Or let us say that the people make up their minds to
|
||
break the law so flagrantly that enforcement falls down and the law
|
||
is either ignored or repealed. That is a human law. That implies a
|
||
lawmaker, of course.
|
||
|
||
But it is treacherous logic to say the "laws" of nature are
|
||
the result of the will of a lawmaker. The scientific use of the
|
||
word "law" as applied to nature means only this: things in nature
|
||
act in certain ways -- their movements are Uniform -- and when you
|
||
use the word "law" you merely describe how things are observed to
|
||
conduct themselves. This does not mean that someone -- a God --
|
||
told them to act just that way. That is an assumption. Bertrand
|
||
Russell gives serious consideration to this argument in one of his
|
||
lectures, and after disposing of the claim of a lawgiver in nature
|
||
along the lines I have just followed, this English philosopher
|
||
adds: "Why did God issue just those natural laws and no others? If
|
||
you say that he did it simply for his own good pleasure, and
|
||
without any reason, you then find that there is something which is
|
||
not subject to law, and so your train of natural law is
|
||
interrupted. If you say, as more orthodox theologians do, that in
|
||
all the laws which God issues he had a reason for giving those laws
|
||
rather than others -- the reason, of course, being to create the
|
||
best universe, although you would never think it to look at it --
|
||
if there was a reason for the laws which God gave, then God himself
|
||
was subject to law, and therefore you do not get any advantage by
|
||
introducing God as an intermediary. You have really a law outside
|
||
and anterior to the divine edicts, and God does not serve your
|
||
purpose, because he is not the ultimate lawgiver. In short, this
|
||
whole argument about natural law no longer has anything like the
|
||
strength that it used to have."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
|
||
Joseph McCabe says in one of his books: "The phrase, 'God has
|
||
impressed his laws on the universe,' is one of the loosest
|
||
conceivable. It is seen to be utterly unintelligible the moment you
|
||
remember the unconsciousness of objects; there is not the remotest
|
||
conceivable analogy with human legislation, as the argument
|
||
implies. In fine, it is clear that if things acted irregularly
|
||
there would be more reason to look for explanations. A thing acts
|
||
according to its nature, and if its nature be relatively stable
|
||
(like an atom). its action is consistent and regular."
|
||
|
||
There are many other theistic arguments, but all, on
|
||
examination, are seen to be mere assumptions, bare sophistry,
|
||
adroit evasion of obvious facts, the urging of metaphysical
|
||
balderdash in an attempt to refute realistic approaches to life.
|
||
The arguments for theism are heated and numerous, but the results
|
||
are always the same -- they cannot show us the slightest evidence
|
||
for the God idea. They cannot show us the finger of God in any
|
||
period of man's history. They cannot show us their God in nature.
|
||
They cannot show us that God exists, that there is any power
|
||
interested in man or his problems, that there is any method for man
|
||
to save himself except through his own efforts, through his own
|
||
mental exertions. Man must fight with his own sweat, and blood, and
|
||
tears. If he is winning a measure of joyousness and gladness and
|
||
laughter out of life, it is because of his faith in his own powers
|
||
and not in some mysterious entity beyond the clouds.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Rebuttal Argument
|
||
By Rev. Burris Jenkins
|
||
|
||
Mr. Haldeman-Julius draws a distinction between the spiritual
|
||
mind and the scientific mind which does not seem to me valid; at
|
||
least, in my own thinking it is not valid. It is a very common
|
||
assumption that the spiritual has nothing to do with the real, with
|
||
facts, with life as it is. That is the constant mistake that the
|
||
pietistic world is making. I am surprised that Mr. Haldeman-Julius
|
||
should be betrayed into making this distinction, because everything
|
||
that has to do with truth, beauty, art, literature, science, is
|
||
spiritually minded; and I maintain that he himself is a profoundly
|
||
spiritually minded man because he is interested in all the beauties
|
||
of the world. And I maintain that I am no less scientific in
|
||
thinking if I have a little strain of spirituality in my own being.
|
||
|
||
He calls me an evolutionary creationist. Maybe that is what I
|
||
am, but my idea was that I was a mystic and something of an
|
||
agnostic -- pretty much of an agnostic. I have passed the
|
||
sophomoric period when I could say things categorically. I don't
|
||
know about this. I don't know about that. The mind is open. And I
|
||
think that is true of the great mystics down through the ages,
|
||
clear to the present time, including Buddha.
|
||
|
||
It is a mistake to call Buddha an atheist. One who is familiar
|
||
with the Buddhist hymns and the Buddhistic philosophy which
|
||
characterized the ancient Indian people, and Buddha in particular,
|
||
mythical and mystic character as he is, coming out of the great
|
||
past, would not call him an atheist. Buddha was a great humanist;
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
18
|
||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
|
||
he loved mankind; and he gave up a palace and a princess wife and
|
||
all power to go into the highways and the byways, the dusty roads
|
||
of India, to serve suffering humanity. Buddha was actuated in his
|
||
humanism by his desire for some sort of contact with the Great
|
||
Mystery. I claim some sort of kinship with Buddha. We are mutually
|
||
mystic. I think that is true of the great philosophers and
|
||
thinkers, religious and otherwise.
|
||
|
||
I admit that preachers have been awfully busy trying to raise
|
||
budgets and build churches and make the mare go; and too often they
|
||
have neglected to think. But even in odd moments thoughts have come
|
||
out. There have been thoughts among the philosophers of Oxford and
|
||
Cambridge; and the best book I know on this subject we have been
|
||
debating is from a great theological, philosophical professor in
|
||
Oxford, Dr. B.H. Streeter, a book called Reality. The profoundest
|
||
thing I know, it gets right down to the roots of this difficult
|
||
metaphysical question we have been trying to discuss,
|
||
|
||
I know that the argument from the first cause is no longer
|
||
used. I never used it. I insist I never used the phrase or the idea
|
||
throughout what I had to say, and if I implied a creator theory, I
|
||
did not intend to do that. I may have spoken of the Creator, but I
|
||
spoke of an Artist, the great Over-Us-All, Power, Mind, Spirit,
|
||
what you will to call it, that is back of it all. I don't care
|
||
whether you say matter was never created or not, or force was never
|
||
created or not; that they always existed. Einstein has just knocked
|
||
the spots out of the whole question of time and space, and it seems
|
||
we didn't know anything about either -- and I am sure I am not one
|
||
of the three men in America who understand Einstein. I don't know.
|
||
I say I am agnostic as to creation, its time, and all that sort of
|
||
thing.
|
||
|
||
Again, in speaking of Descartes, I don't think Mr. Haldeman-
|
||
Julius was quite fair to Descartes. He would lead you to believe
|
||
that Descartes said, "I think; therefore I am," and then right off
|
||
said, "I think God; therefore God is." There was a long space of
|
||
reasoning, careful building of his superstructure, step by step,
|
||
stone by stone, from that foundation, "I think; therefore I am,"
|
||
convincing him of his own existence, before he finally reached the
|
||
highest pinnacle of his philosophy, "I believe in God." You can't
|
||
jump just from the bottom to the top and say, "Look how foolish he
|
||
was, jumping at conclusions." There was long labor and a life of
|
||
thought before Descartes finished his structure.
|
||
|
||
And Kant I know, with his categorical imperative, his appeal
|
||
to the moral law in the universe. He looked at the starry heavens
|
||
above and said, "These things fill me with awe, the stars above and
|
||
the moral law within." That was his greatest argument, the moral
|
||
law in the universe, for logic in its construction, for the
|
||
creation of obligation and duty on the part of man.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Haldeman-Julius draws a distinction also between natural
|
||
law and civil law, which I realize is a frequent source of
|
||
confusion on the part of many religious thinkers; and I am glad he
|
||
drew that distinction, so that we can get it clearly and sharply in
|
||
mind. I will elaborate that point a little. Natural law, as I
|
||
understand it, is something that man finds out about the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
19
|
||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
|
||
constitution of the earth and the universe. He studies causes and
|
||
effects, the results of certain conditions, and he writes them down
|
||
in his laboratory notebook or in his astronomical notebook. When he
|
||
finds a thousand or ten thousand times that, given certain
|
||
situations, certain results follow, then he writes that down and
|
||
calls it a law of nature. I make the bold assertion, and I think it
|
||
will hold water, that moral law is discovered in the same way. It
|
||
simply grows out of man's experience in all the events in this
|
||
complicated thing we call society, rubbing shoulders, jamming and
|
||
oftentimes stepping on each other. When, after long observation, we
|
||
find that under certain circumstances men will act and react
|
||
towards each other in certain ways which strike our sense of
|
||
justice and right, then we put it down on the statute books and we
|
||
say this is the law, it shall be so. Moral law, then, is the
|
||
outgrowth of our knowledge of ourselves, just as natural law is the
|
||
outgrowth of our knowledge of the material world. There is no real
|
||
distinction between the two.
|
||
|
||
And here, if anywhere, Bertrand Russell slips up a little in
|
||
his thinking. I tremble and catch my breath when I take the name of
|
||
Bertrand Russell on my lips and venture to suggest the possibility
|
||
that Jove has nodded in his philosophical thinking. I know he
|
||
probably is the greatest thinker in England at the present time,
|
||
without any doubt. When Bertrand Russell fails to perceive that the
|
||
laws of the Being, of the Artist, the Over-Us-All, the Creator, may
|
||
be just as truly laws of his nature as the laws of man proceed out
|
||
of his being or as natural law proceeds out of the material world,
|
||
it seems to me that he has lost a point.
|
||
|
||
Now, Mr. Haldeman-Julius says that I don't believe in hell.
|
||
Well, I don't believe in certain kinds of hell. I believe in other
|
||
kinds. I don't believe in a literal brimstone lake of fire. I
|
||
remember that fifteen or twenty years ago when the papers got hold
|
||
of an utterance of mine of that kind and printed it, and there was
|
||
quite a good deal of discussion, a colored brother of mine, further
|
||
north, a very fervent preacher, announced he was going to answer
|
||
Burris Jenkins on this idea of hell. He said, "Now, that kind of
|
||
gospel may do all right up there on them boulevards where Dr.
|
||
Jenkins lives and preaches, but if I was to preach that kind of
|
||
gospel there would be no clothes on the lines nor chickens in the
|
||
coops of these same people up on the boulevards." That preacher was
|
||
a pragmatist, you see. He felt that truth was that which functioned
|
||
serviceably for his congregation, and that he would better preach
|
||
the kind of truth that worked well in his environment.
|
||
|
||
Now, I am agreeing with what Mr. Haldeman-Julius says about
|
||
pressing pragmatism to too great an extreme; I think there is a
|
||
little modicum of truth in what he says. But what the experience of
|
||
the race for thousands and thousands and thousands of years has
|
||
tested and found valuable; and what has rung true to that
|
||
mysterious thing within us which I call mysticism in myself, and
|
||
religions thinkers in all the world have followed for two thousand
|
||
years, I think there is likely to be a little something in.
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
20
|
||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
|
||
Rebuttal Argument
|
||
By E. Haldeman-Julius
|
||
|
||
I am sure of one thing: that at the end of this debate Dr.
|
||
Jenkins won't get off of his knees and I won't get down on my
|
||
knees. So I am sure that there will be no concessions at this end
|
||
and I am not so sure about any concessions at the other. I don't
|
||
think either one has been trying to win over any converts. I know
|
||
that is my attitude. I just get a lot of fun out of it. I enjoy
|
||
studying theologians, I think they are very amusing creatures, and
|
||
I can't imagine anything funnier than a theologian in action. But
|
||
instead of going to the circus, I read books on theism.
|
||
|
||
I am sure Dr. Jenkins does not get the scientific distinction
|
||
between a mystic and a realist. An accurate definition of a mystic
|
||
is one who believes that he can reach truth intuitively; that he
|
||
can reach truth within himself without reference to man's
|
||
experiences; that he has mystical power to reach in himself and
|
||
achieve what he would call truth; while the realist, of course,
|
||
follows the scientific method of laboratory tests, scrupulous
|
||
regarding of every fact and very careful observation. They are two
|
||
separate mentalities, two hopelessly different personalities, and
|
||
I can't imagine a good scientist permitting himself to become a
|
||
mystic, though there are a few, and the few mystical scientists are
|
||
those who are giving such comfort to the theologians; men like
|
||
Eddington and Millikan, who are very good physicists, who are men
|
||
of science in their own laboratories, but when they step out in the
|
||
arena of philosophical thought they utter ideas that would pass for
|
||
pretty good coin among the fanatics in a Salvation Army band. I
|
||
think I am speaking pretty literally, because some of their
|
||
arguments are the same arguments used on the street corners. In
|
||
Eddington's latest plea before the Society of Friends in London,
|
||
just a few months ago, and of course for that reason more important
|
||
than his book, 'The Nature of the Physical World,' that he wrote
|
||
about three years ago, he says that the reason the religious idea
|
||
is sound is because there is proof of it in man's experience, man
|
||
has experienced religion, he has experienced God, therefore it is
|
||
true. Well, according to that, same logic, the poor moron who gets
|
||
up on the street corner and gives his testimonial is scientific and
|
||
it is absolutely right and everything that he says is true, every
|
||
philosophical point that he is bringing out must be so, because he
|
||
says he has experienced it; and that, of course, is mysticism.
|
||
Eddington does not reach that conclusion through scientific means.
|
||
He does not take the same methods that he used in his laboratory,
|
||
to bring out that idea. He just simply reaches down into his
|
||
insides and intuitively reaches that opinion, and I leave it to any
|
||
reasonable person that it is completely without validity.
|
||
|
||
Now, Dr. Jenkins mentions Kant's moral law. As I said before,
|
||
I was surprised that he didn't bring up that argument. There are
|
||
several other good arguments for theism that you have neglected,
|
||
Doctor. I was looking for some of them. But this moral law also has
|
||
gone through the storm and also has no standing. It takes the
|
||
position, as I understand Kant, that because there is injustice and
|
||
evil and unhappiness in this world, there must be some sort of
|
||
balance, in the end there must be a balance. And so there must be
|
||
immortality, there must be a God to 'right these wrongs and give us
|
||
justice, love, righteousness and good for evil. I think that is
|
||
expressing his moral law, isn't it?
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
21
|
||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
|
||
DR. JENKINS: Pretty well.
|
||
|
||
MR. HALDEMAN-JULIUS: Well, that is based on such a flagrant
|
||
assumption that it was soon laughed out of court. It could not be
|
||
accepted. That appeared in one of Bertrand Russell's passages. I
|
||
notice Dr. Jenkins refers to him as the most learned thinker in
|
||
England today. He is, perhaps, the most learned philosopher in the
|
||
world today; he is also an atheist. He says that this life is the
|
||
only life we know anything about. And if this is a fair sample of
|
||
life, and this life is unhappy and there is injustice in it, why
|
||
isn't it safe to assume that the continuation of life is where it
|
||
left off? It is just the same thing. Don't you see the point? The
|
||
moral law. If we had a knowledge of any other life, we could then
|
||
make comparisons, but if we say life is continued and then say at
|
||
the end of our life there is a change, that is the assumption. The
|
||
logical thing is to say it is a continuation and if there is
|
||
another life it must have all the pains and unhappiness we have.
|
||
That was Bertrand Russell's argument. He said, suppose you get a
|
||
crate of oranges from California, you open it and find that all at
|
||
the top are rotten. He says that, according to Kant's moral law,
|
||
you, say that since the top layer is rotten it must follow that all
|
||
the rest of the oranges are good. That is exactly what Kant taught,
|
||
and it had no validity for that reason.
|
||
|
||
Now, as for beauty in nature, that, of course, is the argument
|
||
for design. That argument was very good for a while. That argument
|
||
was very good for a while until Darwinism appeared. The botanists
|
||
gave us that idea. You find this flower, they say, it is wonderful
|
||
--
|
||
|
||
DR. JENKINS: No, it was Paley, a theologian, an English
|
||
preacher.
|
||
|
||
MR. HALDEMAN-JULIUS: I take that correction. But the botanists
|
||
were fond of quoting it. They stole it from the theologians. It
|
||
appears that one argument for theism did come from the theologians;
|
||
and that, like the others, is very bad.
|
||
|
||
If there were proof of creation, then of course the created
|
||
thing would have its beauty of design. No question about it. But
|
||
life is an evolution and the ideas as propounded by Darwin are
|
||
accepted -- and most intelligent people do accept them -- evolution
|
||
is not a theory any more; it is a fact. We speak now of the truth
|
||
of evolution, not of the theory. If organic matter is the product
|
||
of its environment, in adjusting itself to its environment it takes
|
||
on the shapes that are possible within its conditions, its
|
||
fortuitous existence, the accidents of temperature, of soil, the
|
||
general accidents; and immediately nature will produce an animal of
|
||
one color here and of another color in another place; we will see
|
||
the white polar bear in the arctic zone and a different animal at
|
||
another place. Then of course it doesn't take into consideration
|
||
all the things that are ugly. We consider a germ an ugly thing.
|
||
Some people consider spiders ugly. I don't. Some people consider
|
||
mice ugly. I don't, but I do consider rats ugly. We don't consider
|
||
beauty to be an independent reality. Beauty is the effect that an
|
||
object has on us. When we look at a sunset, we would not say that
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
22
|
||
|
||
IS THEISM A LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY?
|
||
|
||
that sunset was beautiful, but we would say that the effect it has
|
||
upon our aesthetic sense is pleasing, and therefore it is
|
||
beautiful. And to get a God idea out of that is stretching it
|
||
beyond all reason.
|
||
|
||
It seems to me what the religionists should do is to forget
|
||
about all these arguments about God -- this effort to prove that
|
||
their faith is founded on the rock of reason -- and go back to
|
||
their original position that they have faith and it is not
|
||
necessary for them to produce arguments for a God. And if they
|
||
would take that position, we would just consider them a little
|
||
psychopathic, and possibly humor them.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
|
||
scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
|
||
suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
|
||
Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
|
||
nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
|
||
religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
|
||
the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
|
||
that America can again become what its Founders intended --
|
||
|
||
The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
||
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
||
and information for today. If you have such books please send us a
|
||
list that includes Title, Author, publication date, condition and
|
||
price desired, and we will give them back to America.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
23
|
||
|