Questions regarding first chapter of Craig’s "Reasonable Faith"

I want to start by saying I’m a huge fan of William Lane Craig and recently met him at a fairly local Reasonable Faith conference. I had almost finished reading On Guard when the conference began and have since completed On Guard and begun reading his signature book, Reasonable Faith. I love this quote from the introduction to Reasonable Faith: “Like a missionary called to reach some obscure people group, the Christian apologist is burdened to reach that minority of persons who will respond to rational argument and evidence.” However, I am not one to accept everything I read without critical examination, so…

These are some thoughts and questions I have regarding the first chapter of Dr. Craig’s “Reasonable Faith”. The chapter is titled “How Do I Know Christianity Is True?” and my questions are mainly regarding the idea of “dual warrant”.

One thing I like about this chapter is that it helped me understand that the testimony of the Holy Spirit functions like the innocent person’s experience of their alibi. It is true even if we cannot show it to be true. This protects it from “theological rationalism” or “evidentialism” which (Dr. Craig and Dr. Plantinga assert) only counts propositions that are self-evident or incorrigible as properly basic, and requires evidence (other than indubitable self-evidence) for all other propositions. If theological rationalism or evidentialism were true, then (according to Dr. Craig and Dr. Plantinga) someone intellectually incapable of a complete apologetic would be incapable of a relationship with God (or, for that matter, their mother, though they didn’t say it).

In a YouTube interview, Dr. Craig accepts that someone can come to believe/know God exists either through 1) experiencing the testimony of the Holy Spirit, or through 2) nonexperiential means (evidence, rational argument, etc.). However, on page 48 of Reasonable Faith, he says, “a sound apologetic…reinforces or confirms…the Spirit’s witness, but it does not serve as the basis of…belief” and on page 58 he says, “they trusted the Holy Spirit to use their arguments to bring people to God”. Since knowledge is justified/warranted, true belief, then if a sound apologetic cannot serve as a basis of belief, it cannot serve as a basis of knowing, either. And Dr. Craig seems to say that nonexperiential evidence does not lead to knowledge, that only the testimony of the Holy Spirit leads to knowledge, when he says there is a difference between how we ‘know’ (through the testimony of the Holy Spirit) and how we ‘show’ (through nonexperiential means like evidence, rational argument, etc.). But Dr. Craig should choose either, 1) we ‘can’ believe/know God exists through nonexperiential means (as he says in the YouTube interview), or 2) we ‘cannot’ believe/know God exists through nonexperiential means (as he says in Reasonable Faith). Perhaps he ‘has’ chosen the first one and has not had the chance to revise Reasonable Faith? Or perhaps he has just not thoroughly thought about it, because on pages 58-59 he writes, “we know confidently and without embarrassment that our faith is true, as can the unbeliever as well”. But the unbeliever does not know based on the testimony of the Holy Spirit, so is Dr. Craig saying we, too, can know without the testimony of the Holy Spirit?

I completely agree that a “personal experience” type of knowledge cannot be “shown” to others because they cannot share our experience. Instead we must use nonexperiential means (which Dr. Craig thinks of as another source of warrant) of showing that what we know by experience (which Dr. Craig considers the first source of warrant) is also true independent of experience. So in order to show it is true, we must not only know it is true by experience (first source of warrant), we must know it is true via the use of those other means (another source of warrant). Dr. Craig calls this “dual warrant” or being “doubly warranted”. This ‘first source of warrant’ does not reduce to subjective truth. For example, we know from experience (first source of warrant) that we did not commit a crime for which we are on trial. But in order to show we are ‘objectively’ innocent, we must provide actual arguments and evidence (another source of warrant) that are accessible to others who do not share our experience. Our first source of warrant will not suffice to ‘show’ the truth, but we will keep ‘know’ing we are truly innocent even if we cannot provide another source of warrant. I disagree w/ the idea of having “dual warrant” but must lead up to this…

As Dr. Craig does not distinguish (instead draws a parallel) between the experience of one’s own alibi, and the experience of the testimony of the Holy Spirit, and does not argue we have ‘triple’ warrant [1) experience of the testimony of the Holy Spirit, 2) experience not involving the testimony of the Holy Spirit…say, Calvin’s sensus divinitatus, 3) nonexperiential evidence substantiating one’s experience in ‘1’ or ‘2’], the following paragraph is written under the assumption that the testimony of the Holy Spirit is considered something we experience, so that the truths to which the Holy Spirit testifies are truths we come to know by experience of the Holy Spirit’s testimony.

One thing I disagree with in this chapter is that the evidence of our own experience (for example, of innocence during a court trial) is not lumped in with the nonexperiential evidence that is accessible to others. Evidence is evidence. Experiential evidence may not be evidence for ‘others’ but it is still evidence (for ‘us’). I like the idea that belief in God’s existence is properly basic since, for example, we behave as if (we know/experience intuitively) there are moral absolutes, even though not all of us know (intellectually) the God that grounds them. That intuitive knowing is a properly basic belief that is ‘warranted’/justified even if the intellectual defense is never given. But I would disagree that the intuitive warrant/justification and the intellectual warrant/justification, taken together, make the belief “doubly warranted”—instead, they both contribute to the warrant/justification. If we can have “dual warrant” because we have both experiential and nonexperiential types of evidence, then why stop at the division between experiential/nonexperiential, why stop at ‘dual’? (Only half-rhetorical.) No, if belief is warranted/justified, it is warranted/justified by all the different types of available evidence, no matter how you categorize them—and experiential evidence (in this case, of the Holy Spirit’s testimony) is just one of them, rather than being on an entirely different level from the rest. I was thinking that perhaps 1) distinguishing between experiencing the Holy Spirit, and other evidence, and 2) giving priority to experiencing the Holy Spirit, are both owed to the belief that those who do not believe the witness of the Holy Spirit (first source of warrant/justification) will never believe ‘other’ evidences for the Christian faith (considered another source of warrant/justification)? But Dr. Craig says that one benefit of having this “dual warrant” is that “the availability of independent warrant for Christian truth claims apart from the Spirit’s witness could help predispose an unbeliever to respond to the drawing of the Holy Spirit when he hears the gospel.” So clearly Dr. Craig does not think that an unbeliever will only accept “independent warrant” ‘after’ accepting the Spirit’s witness.

Knowledge is justified/warranted, true belief. But Dr. Craig says that Plantinga said that it is not enough to say (says, said, say, haha) that the belief is justified/warranted, it must also be formed/held by properly functioning (as God designed them to) cognitive faculties. This just seems to push the question further back—how do we know the faculties are properly functioning (as God designed them to)? (See link below.) I like that Plantinga (says Dr. Craig) sees that a properly basic belief, like “God exists” can still have arguments brought against it (it is defeasible, falsifiable), like the problem of evil. I also like that he points out that, just as our experience of our alibi defeats all the defeaters (arguments of the prosecution), our experience of the testimony of the Holy Spirit defeats all the defeaters (arguments of skeptics/atheists)—but only for ourselves. In order to defeat all the defeaters for ‘others’ (Plantinga agrees), we must use nonexperiential means of defeating defeaters (like the Free Will Defense). Where I disagree with Plantinga (via Dr. Craig: “this belief is so warranted that such a person can be said to know that God exists” p. 41) is that our belief in the truths of Christianity is ‘so’ warranted by our experience of the testimony of the Holy Spirit as to constitute knowledge (regardless of all defeaters) because knowledge does not merely depend on warrant/justification, it also requires correspondence/truth. I would also object to the idea that the more firmly we believe something, the more that belief is warranted/justified knowledge (“The more firmly such a person holds the belief in question, the more warrant it has for him, and if he believes it firmly enough, it has sufficient warrant to constitute knowledge” p. 42)—rather, the better our reasons, the more firmly we will believe, and if our belief corresponds to reality (is true), then our believing is also knowing (even for demons, who know God exists while rejecting him). All else is wishful thinking. Also, Dr. Craig reflects the belief that knowledge requires certainty when he says, “even if we can only show Christianity to be probably true, nevertheless we can on the basis of the Spirit’s witness know Christianity to be true” (p. 56) but knowledge only requires that our belief is justified and true—it does not require our belief is ‘certain’. I’m guessing the other problems in this paragraph can all be solved by answering Gettier (though I have yet to read Plantinga), which I’ve done here.

In the end, I agree reason (justification/warrant) can only be ministerial, because something is true (if true) whether or not we have good reasons for it or against it. Our knowledge of our innocence is based on the evidence of our personal experience of our alibi (and whatever nonexperiential evidence we may have), but we remain truly innocent even if the defense can produce no nonexperiential evidence substantiating our alibi; even if the prosecution can produce evidence against us. Likewise, our knowledge of the truths of Christianity is based on the evidence of our personal experience of the testimony of the Holy Spirit (and whatever nonexperiential evidence we may have), but those truths remain even if we can produce no nonexperiential evidence substantiating our personal testimony; even if skeptics/atheists can produce arguments against it. However, something that is true will never defy reason/logic. There will be some flaw in every argument/evidence brought against it.

I differ from Dr. Craig on the ‘problem of the unevangelized’ but that is a different topic. We at least agree that the Holy Spirit can be resisted. In my personal experience, God brought me back through the ‘experiential reason’ of the testimony of the Holy Spirit (I still had the choice of saying yes or no), and only after that did I care about finding nonexperiential reasons that were accessible to others (similar to Dr. Craig’s testimony). I only put my faith/trust “in” him after he showed me “that” he exists and loves me. Perhaps there are others out there who come to (were drawn by?) God through those sorts of reasons (come to believe “that” God exists), and ‘then’ experience the Spirit’s testimony (and hopefully choose to put faith/trust “in” him)? Dr. Craig seems to say there ‘can’ be in the YouTube video, but it’s a little fuzzy where he stands on that in Reasonable Faith. Would love to hear from him on that, but he ‘is’ a busy guy.

Posted in Gettier Problem, Justified True Belief, William Lane Craig | 11 Comments

Evidence for Easter

It is Good Friday of Easter weekend and high time for some evidence behind the claim that Jesus died and rose again to demonstrate he loves us as himself. Below is a relevant compilation of blog posts, audio and video, including evidence and debate.

[ Not all, but definitely many of the links below were gleaned from Greg West’s The Poached Egg and Shawn White’s Living Dead Man – thankyou! ]

There are seven sections: 1. Introduction, 2. New Testament (NT) Reliability, 3. The Testimony of the Women, 4. The Empty Tomb, 5. The Resurrection, 6. Gary Habermas, 7. Debates.

1. Introduction:

How every Christian can learn to explain the resurrection of Jesus to others posted at Wintery Knight by Wintery Knight.

2. New Testament (NT) Reliability

Extra-Biblical References to Jesus posted at Christian Apologetics Alliance by Scott Rachui.

The 7 E’s of NT Historical Reliability posted at Living Dead Man by Shawn White.

Dr. Phil Fernandes on New Testament Reliability posted at Living Dead Man by Shawn White.

Mike Licona on New Testament Eyewitness Testimony posted at Living Dead Man by Shawn White.

3. The Testimony of the Women

Do the gospel writers contradict eachother in the response of the women in their accounts? (part 6 of 6) posted at The Real Issue by Rob Lundberg.

Unlikely story of the women posted at Possible Worlds by Randy Everist.

The eyewitness testimony of Jesus’ women followers supports the empty tomb posted at Wintery Knight by Wintery Knight.

4. The Empty Tomb

The Empty Tomb Revisited posted at Possible Worlds by Randy Everist.

Early, independent sources for the empty tomb posted at Wintery Knight by Wintery Knight.

5. The Resurrection

Gary Habermas explains the earliest source of resurrection facts posted at Wintery Knight by Wintery Knight.

Defending and Proving the Resurrection posted at The Resurgence by Justin Holcomb.

Evidence for the Resurrection of Christ posted at Peter Kreeft by Peter Kreeft and Ronald K. Tacelli.

Is your Jesus big enough to explain Easter? posted at thinkChristianly.org by Jonathan Morrow.

Evidence for the Resurrection of Christ in a Nutshell posted at Parchment & Pen by C Michael Patton.

The Fact of the Resurrection Part 1 – Resurrection as History posted at Come Reason’s Apologetics Notes by Lenny Esposito.

How Easter Killed My Faith in Atheism posted at the WSJ’s Speakeasy by Lee Strobel.

The Resurrection of Jesus Christ (part 1 of 6) posted at Thinking Christian by Tom Gilson.

Thoughts on Jesus and the Resurrection (part 1 of 8 and a conclusion) posted at Christian Apologetics Alliance by Scott Rachui.

Taking A Blind Leap Of Doubt: Common Objections To The Historicity Of The New Testament, Jesus, And The Resurrection-Part 1 (of 2) posted at The God Hypothesis by philosopherjosh.

Evidence for the Resurrection, a Discussion with Mike Licona available at 4Truth.Net.

Did Jesus Rise from the Dead? (part 1 of 2) with Doug Powell posted on YouTube.

5 Facts of the Resurrection (Habermas/Licona minimal facts method) posted at Living Dead Man by Shawn White.

William Lane Craig’s Resurrection Method posted at Living Dead Man by Shawn White:
Part 1 : Part 2 : Part 3

N.T. Wright’s Minimal Facts Method posted at Living Dead Man by Shawn White.

N.T. Wright on the Resurrection posted on YouTube.

Quick overview of N.T. Wright’s case for the resurrection posted at Wintery Knight by Wintery Knight.

Ten Resources to help you talk to non-Christians about the resurrection of Jesus posted at Wintery Knight by Wintery Knight.

The Resurrection of Jesus Christ by Douglas Geivett posted at Living Dead Man by Shawn White.

Historical Evidence for the Resurrection of Jesus (Craig Hazen) posted at Living Dead Man by Shawn White.

6. Gary Habermas:

On the Resurrection with Gary Habermas on the Infidel Guy Show posted on YouTube.

Gary Habermas’ Secular Sources for Jesus Christ posted on YouTube.

Partial lecture by Dr. Gary Habermas on Evidence for the Resurrection of Jesus posted on YouTube.

The Resurrection of Jesus – Gary Habermas posted at Living Dead Man by Shawn White.

Historicity of the Resurrection (Habermas) posted at Living Dead Man by Shawn White.

7. Debates:

Debate: Can the Resurrection of Jesus be Historically Substantiated? between Vocab and Tim posted at Living Dead Man by Shawn White.

Habermas/Humphreys Debate: Resurrection – Religious Fiction or Historical Fact? posted at Living Dead Man by Shawn White.

Craig/Ludeman Debate: Jesus’ Resurrection: Fact or Figment? posted at Living Dead Man by Shawn White.

Craig/Carrier Debate: Did Jesus Rise from the Dead? posted at Living Dead Man by Shawn White.

Licona/Carrier Debate: Did Jesus Rise from the Dead? posted at Living Dead Man by Shawn White.

Callahan/Habermas Debate: Did Jesus Rise from the Dead? posted on YouTube.

Sharp/Gulam Debate: Did Jesus Die on the Cross? posted on YouTube.

Ehrman/Craig Debate: Did Jesus Rise from the Dead? posted on YouTube.  Transcript.

Ally/Craig Debate: Did Jesus Rise from the Dead? posted on YouTube.

Price/Fernandes Debate: Is Jesus the Risen Lord? on the Infidel Guy Show posted on YouTube.

Licona/Ehrman Debate: Can Historians Prove Jesus Rose from the Dead? posted at Living Dead Man by Shawn White.

Licona/Barker Debate: Did Jesus Rise from the Dead? posted at Living Dead Man by Shawn White.

Crossley/Craig Debate: Was Jesus Bodily Raised from the Dead? posted at Apologetics 315 by Brian Auten.

List of articles on evidence for God

Posted in Apologetics, Apologetics Toolbox | 2 Comments

Christian Carnival #376

Welcome to the April 20, 2011 edition of Christian Carnival!  There are two categories in this carnival:  Apologetics and Theological Issues, and Devotionals and Advice.  Enjoy!

Apologetics and Theological Issues

Rey Reynoso presents Christ Didn’t Die For All: He Died For Paul posted at The Bible Archive, saying, “Satire.”

Barry Wallace presents Something most Southern Baptists never hear posted at who am i?, saying, “J.C. Ryle makes a number of statements in his classic book ‘Holiness’ which I think make some Christians uncomfortable. I mention one of them in this post.”

Randy Everist presents The Empty Tomb Revisited posted at Possible Worlds, saying, “A brief look at evidence for the empty tomb of Jesus of Nazareth; a timely reminder for Easter!”

Jeremy Pierce presents Imposing Religion posted at Parableman, saying, “a look at what it means to impose one’s religion”.

Kaleb presents Defending the Christian Faith posted at W2W Soul: Windows to The Woman’s Soul, saying, “For the past two years I have been building a relationship with two of my colleagues and in so doing sharing my faith with them when given the opportunity.”

Chris Brooks presents Using the JW Bible to Prove the Deity of Christ posted at Homeward Bound.  Chris is referring to showing JWs that their New World Translation still contains references to Christ’s deity, despite their attempts to remove them.  It should be noted that they did not remove John 1:1, merely adapted it so that instead of saying “the Word was God” it says “the Word was a god.”

Yours truly presents The Golden Rule (self=Other) and God posted here at Ichthus77.

**I highly recommend William Lane Craig‘s On Guard and am currently reading his Reasonable Faith.  See the recently formed Christian Apologetics Alliance website for Christian apologetics blogs.

Devotionals and Advice

Khaleef presents Everything In This World Is Liable To Change! posted at Faithful With A Few, saying, “We shouldn’t get too caught up in the things of this world. They are all temporal and subject to change at any moment. This goes for both possessions and circumstances as well!”

Jason Price presents The Biggest Lie of Leadership saying, “The Bible offers an important message on leadership and how good leaders are never alone.”

Jennifer in OR presents My Reflection in the Dirty Pane Glass posted at Diary of 1.

loswl presents Amazing Love posted at INSPIKS, saying, “The Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ is truly the wonder of all wonders. It seems that the more we know our God the more we realize there is so much more we don’t know.”

Duke Taber presents Home on the Range – How you can be happy no matter where you are! posted at Taber’s Truths, saying, “Spiritual insights for the common man”.

Ridge Burns presents The Cartwright Hotel posted at Ridge’s Blog.

elissa peterson presents 20 Grand, part 2 posted at don’t let life pass you by, saying, “the story of how God dropped $20,000 in our lap to help us with our adoption expenses”.

michelle presents what I know posted at going into all the earth….

Crystal Rodli presents What I learned about God at the zoo posted at Treasure Contained.

***

That concludes this edition. If your submission didn’t make it into this edition, you can always try again for next week’s carnival.  Submit your blog article to the next edition of Christian Carnival using our carnival submission form.

Past posts and future hosts can be found on our blog carnival index page.  Have a blessed week :)

Posted in Carnival, Golden Rule | 2 Comments

The Golden Rule (self=Other) and God

The Golden Rule (treat the Other as self; self=Other, as opposed to self>Other, as in egoism, or self<Other, as in some utilitarian theories) is both…
  • the why (the end; consequentialist/teleological theories) and
  • how (the means; conduct/duty theories) of both
  • being (virtue theory) and
  • doing (conduct/duty theories)
  • (be=do=end).
Only the Golden Rule completely answers each aspect of the question “How and why should we be/behave with the Other/self?” and so it is justified above all other theories in Ethics.
It is found in every major culture/religion, suggesting a hunger which would not exist if there were…
  • nothing to satisfy it
  • nothing to which the Golden Rule corresponds
  • no Being/Doing which is described by the Golden Rule
  • no Being/Doing which commands in accordance with His good nature/essence
  • no Being/Doing which demonstrates the Golden Rule, loving us as He loves Himself, as Christ demonstrated on the cross in taking our place and imputing his righteousness onto us.

Any thoughts this Holy Week?

God (is) the Golden Rule (ought) without offending Hume

Posted in Golden Rule | Leave a comment

Hosting Christian Carnival #376 on April 20

I’ve been granted the honor of hosting the April 20 Christian Carnival.  Click on the hyper-linked words in the previous sentence for submission guidelines (and see below).  You can submit blog posts here, here or hereSubscribe to the Carnival to get notified of weekly carnivals.  Browse the archives (includes a bit of the history of the Carnival).  “Like” and share Christian Carnival on Facebook! :)

Please note that among the variety of good blog posts I will be featuring, I will only allow ‘one’ blog post about finances, and only if I like it and it follows the guidelines.  Just a heads-up.  Share this with your fellow Christian bloggers :)

Posted in Carnival | Leave a comment

This week’s Christian Carnival is posted

Christian Carnival #375 at Jevlir Caravansary.  This carnival features my Craig v Harris debate post mortem, audio and video, as well as my God (is) the Golden Rule (ought) without offending Hume.

I’ll be hosting the next carnival.  Here is my call for submissions.

Also check out this list of posts at Christian Apologetics Alliance.  Apologetics bloggers are all getting together on this site and I just joined the team.  So awesome.

Posted in Carnival, Golden Rule | Leave a comment

God (is) the Golden Rule (ought) without offending Hume

Would very much appreciate some feedback on this.  I have tried to put all of it in my own words without referring to influential sources. 

Clearly some of it needs more reasons (like the GR’s presence in every major culture/religion, how the GR resolves practical ethical dilemmas, the evidence for Jesus’ death/resurrection, biblical basis, et cetera), but the following is just a summary.  If given the time and opportunity, I’d expand upon it.  Any thoughts on the following?…

Every major culture/religion hungers for the answer to the question of Ethics, and only one of the answers, the Golden Rule, is found in every major culture/religion.  The universal presence of that answer does not justify it, but the universal hunger for an answer does suggest there is something to satisfy that hunger.  The question, or hunger, of Ethics can be phrased “How and why should we be or behave with the Other/self?”  Coming late on the scene, all of the theories in Ethics besides the Golden Rule focus on only 1) how we should ‘be’ (character or virtue theories), 2) what we should ‘do’ (conduct or duty theories), or 3) the ‘end’ (consequentialist, teleological theories), and they run into difficulties when it comes to whether self or Other should take priority.  In contrast, the Golden Rule answers the question by describing the ‘end’ of what we should ‘do’ and how we should ‘be’ (be=do=end) as treating the Other as self (self=Other), as not merely recognizing a sameness between self and Other, but acknowledging that sameness in our behavior with self/Other.  So the Golden Rule is the only theory in Ethics which completely answers the question, the only one which has the most justification to be believed and lived.

But in order to be objectively real, it cannot be purely theoretical—it must also correspond to reality—there must be a real being whose nature and behavior (including commands) is described by the Golden Rule.  Justification is about having good reasons to believe something is true, to believe that it corresponds to reality.  However, just because we are justified in believing something is true does not necessarily mean it ‘is’ true, otherwise we would never know what it is like to be wrong.  So the fact that the Golden Rule is the most justified theory in Ethics does not prove its correspondence to reality, for that would commit the reverse of Hume’s is-ought (the ought-is) fallacy.  The Golden Rule is true only if it actually corresponds to real being, and regardless how good or bad our reasons. 

On the flip-side of the same coin, the mere existence (or assumed existence) of this being cannot justify the Golden Rule, for that would commit the is-ought fallacy.  Just because we believe something that is true (or is at least assumed to be true), does not mean we have good reasons for believing—we could be right by accident.  Fortunately there are at least two good, strong reasons which justify believing the Golden Rule not only completely answers the question of Ethics, but also corresponds (is true) to real being:  1) as already mentioned, we have a universal hunger for the answer to the question of Ethics, and 2) there is evidence of the being which the answer describes, to which the answer corresponds. 

First, universal physical hunger indicates that food existed long enough for us to evolve that hunger for it—likewise, universal spiritual hunger for true meaning (acknowledged even by the self-proclaimed Four Horsemen) suggests there is an actual being described by self=Other.  Second, there is evidence, internal and external to the biblical record, of Jesus’ substitutionary sacrifice as the ultimate demonstration of Golden Rule love, and of his divine resurrection.  So we are justified in believing in a being described by the Golden Rule because 1) it satisfies the hunger (answers the question) of Ethics, both 2) theoretically (be=do=end, self=Other) and 3) practically, by way of ultimate demonstration (for love is not love without demonstration) (aka revelation).  If we are not wrong about any of those reasons and such a being actually exists, we don’t merely justifiably believe, we correspondently know, for knowledge (as Plato affirmed long ago) is belief that is both 1) justified (in that the evidence obligates us to believe something corresponds to reality, whether or not it does), and 2) true (in that something corresponds to reality whether or not we have good reasons to believe it does).

All of the above A) resolves Euthyphro’s (and another unnamed) dilemma between natural law and divine command/revelation [because 1) God commands/reveals in accordance with his good nature, and 2) we can know the Golden Rule through reason and intuition only if it corresponds in order to be known—the dilemma this resolves ought to have a name if it doesn’t alreadyworking on it], B) affirms Hume’s is-ought distinction rather than defying or dismissing it (and without dissolving into skepticism), and C) dismantles Gettier’s problem while affirming its underlying intuition (more on that here http://ichthus77.blogspot.com/2011/01/answering-gettier.html), preserving Plato’s justified-true-belief definition of knowledge.

Discussed here on Facebook.

Also see: The Golden Rule (self=Other) and God

Posted in Divine Essentialism, Euthyphro Dilemma, Gettier Problem, Golden Rule, Is-Ought Fallacy, Justified True Belief | 3 Comments

New Facebook page for Christian Carnival, widget fully updated

There is a new Facebook page for Christian Carnival, and the widget is fully updated. 

“Like” Christian Carnival on Facebook and share with other Christian bloggers and readers.   :)


You can put the like box for the FB page in a sidebar on your blog.

Code for the Facebook like box: http://www.facebook.com/plugins/likebox.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fpages%2FChristian-Carnival%2F200960136604170&width=292&colorscheme=light&show_faces=true&stream=true&header=true&height=427

http://www.facebook.com/plugins/likebox.php?href=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fpages%2FChristian-Carnival%2F200960136604170&width=292&colorscheme=light&show_faces=true&stream=true&header=true&height=427

Posted in Carnival | Leave a comment

William Lane Craig v. Sam Harris will indeed be streamed live! :)

This just in regarding the Craig-Harris debate at Notre Dame this Thursday, surrounding the issue “Is the foundation of morality natural or supernatural?”—the long-awaited live-streaming link…

“I’m sorry it’s taken me so long to get back to you with an answer about online availability. I got it myself this afternoon. There will be a live stream on http://www.ndtv.net/. On the day of the debate, Thursday April 7 at 7:00, the home page of http://www.ndtv.net/ will be replaced with the live stream. I hope you enjoy it.”

Joe Stanfiel

Joseph Stanfiel, PhD
Assistant Dean
College of Arts & Letters
Office for Undergraduate Studies
University of Notre Dame

***

Thankyou, Joe Stanfiel!!! :)

Will William Lane Craig be using David Hume’s is-ought fallacy, and Sam Harris’ appreciation of correspondence theory, to question Harris on what his real ought corresponds to in reality? Find out at http://www.ndtv.net/ this Thursday at 7pm EST.

Open letter to William Lane Craig regarding April 7 debate with Sam Harris.
A great preview of the debate over at Wintery Knight.

Posted in Apologetics, William Lane Craig | Leave a comment

Faith in Philosophy: Philosophers’ Carnival #123

Faith in Philosophy: Philosophers’ Carnival #123

***

Posted this in reply:

Just curious if you reviewed this submission, and why you thought not to include it:

http://ichthus77.blogspot.com/2011/03/natural-law-divine-command-and.html

Good carnival, nonetheless. Thanks.

***

Received email:

Hi Maryann,

…I did review the submission you mention. It’s an important topic of course, but it also covered a lot of ground in a very short time, and I had a little trouble getting clear about what the argument was. I’m sure that this is due to my not being a very good reader, and also being pressed for time (term paper season!). (I’m going to remove your comment since I’m addressing your question in this message.) In any case, best wishes and happy spring.

-Matt

***

*sigh*

Posted in Carnival | 2 Comments