Have you heard of Occam’s razor?
Of course. Do not multiply causes beyond necessity. Why?
How are #s 1, 2, 3, and 7 evidence for God?
Proof 1: Dependability
When we’re functioning properly, we think that our senses and thoughts are reliable, but what basis do we have for thinking this? Unless there is a standard to link proper functionality together with honesty and the truth, how can we be sure that our proper function will lead to any understanding of the truth at all?
Certainly, naturalistic hypotheses provide no such standard for what the “proper function” of our senses is, or why we should assume that those who are functioning “properly” are able to perceive the truth with their senses.
However, if our senses were given to us by a God, who wants us to know the truth, then the correct function of the senses would be to reach the truth, and the reason for their dependability would be that God wishes us to know the truth.
Is there any reason, on atheism, for why our senses would lead us to truth, instead of just survival? I’ve never heard a good one proposed.
So, in the absence of alternative explanations for this, the dependability of our senses is good evidence that God exists.
Proof 2: Objective Morals
Premise 1: If God does not exist, objective moral values do not exist.
Objective moral values are values which are binding on everyone, and would be correct, even if no human beings existed to agree or disagree with them. Without the existence of God, moral values wouldn’t be objective in this way. After all, how can there be a moral law, unless there is a moral law
giver? How can we be responsible for acting in a certain way, unless there’s someone for us to be responsible
towards?
God, as the source and true nature of all goodness, is, in his very nature, the objective basis of moral values, because his nature is inherently good, right, just and virtuous. It is that unchanging nature which provides us with a source of the objectivity of moral values, in the same way that the sun provides us with a source of light.
Most importantly, however, we know that moral values must come from God, or something very like him.
Moral values can’t be based on some inanimate force, because moral acts are acts of the will, and no inanimate object or force has a will.
They can’t be based on individual persons, or else, they wouldn’t be objective. Each person would just decide on their own “right” and “wrong” on the fly, and this is subjectivity, not objectivity.
They can’t be based on the decisions of societies, because even
societies are subjective in their value judgments. This would not be objective.
They must therefore be based on an intelligence which is free, perfectly-good, and which is beyond human beings and human societies, and beyond the merely physical realm of which we’re aware.
Premise 2: Objective moral values
do exist.
The fact is, unless objective moral values exist, nothing that anyone has ever done was
really good or
really wrong. We know that this is the case from our experience with life. When someone steals our car and drives off, this isn’t just some social taboo. It’s
actually wrong. When a teenager walks into a school and starts attacking his fellow students, he’s not just being unfashionable. This is an
objectively immoral act, which he has an
obligation not to do.
Therefore, objective moral values exist.
Conclusion: Therefore, God exists.
Proof 3: Evil
Premise 1: There is evil.
Premise 2: In order for the evil to really exist, there must be a real standard for actions and choices to be objectively moral or immoral.
Conclusion: Therefore, there is such a standard of objective moral good, against which evil actions act.
We then refer to argument 2 for what kind of standard it would have to be.
Proof 7: The Ontological Argument
Premise 1: If God exists, he is a maximally great being, for if a greater being existed, then that would be God.
Premise 2: It is possible that a maximally great being exists.
Premise 3: If it is possible that a maximally great being exists, then a maximally great being exists in some possible world.
Premise 4: If a maximally great being exists in some possible world, then it exists in every possible world.
Premise 5: If a maximally great being exists in every possible world, then it exists in the actual world.
Premise 6: If a maximally great being exists in the actual world, then a maximally great being exists.
Conclusion 1: Therefore, a maximally great being exists.
Conclusion 2: Therefore, God exists.
In the case of the first proof, God is cited as the only available explanation for why the proper functions of our senses coincides with the truth, and is therefore the best explanation.
In the case of the second proof, God is cited as the only plausible explanation for the objectivity of moral values, and in the third proof, the objectivity of moral values is cited as the only plausible explanation for the objectivity of moral evil.
Finally, in proof 7, God is proved to exist because he is, by definition, a maximally great being, and as long as all of the premises of the argument remain correct, the argument is a good one.