C
CatholicSoxFan
Guest
I’ve looked a bit recently into the way in which William Lane Craig and Alvin Plantinga say that belief in God is properly basic, and it is somewhat concerning. I have heard it said by them that the proper basically of belief in God and in Christianity based on the witness of the Spirit can act as a defeater of any potential defeater that could possibly be presented against it. This mens that according to them, no amount of publicly available evidence could make it irrational for them to believe in God, even in principle. This seems hypocritical at best. Once you say this about your belief in God, you have absolutely no leg to stand on in order to:
What is the Catholic position on this? Whatever it is, how are we to defend it? If it is closer to the evidentialist side of the spectrum, how are we to deal with the examples of people born in the Soviet Union who is never exposed to arguments for the existence of God? If it is closer to Craig’s side of the spectrum, how are we to distinguish it from fideism and how are we to make it consistent to being open-minded to the truth and holding non-believers by said standard?
- Claim that you are seeking the truth.
- Accuse atheist X of being closed-minded, having dogmatic naturalistic assumptions, etc.
- Mock the idea that faith is belief in spite of evidence.
What is the Catholic position on this? Whatever it is, how are we to defend it? If it is closer to the evidentialist side of the spectrum, how are we to deal with the examples of people born in the Soviet Union who is never exposed to arguments for the existence of God? If it is closer to Craig’s side of the spectrum, how are we to distinguish it from fideism and how are we to make it consistent to being open-minded to the truth and holding non-believers by said standard?