If Mr. Hawking is right, the answer to the question “What created the universe?” is “The laws of physics.” But what created the laws of physics?
Hawking says “dunno, can’t know”. I’d agree with that response. It’s not clear that “created” is apropos here, at all. It may be, it may not be. We don’t know. If some context obtains as eternal or uncreated, then it’s nonsense to ask what created it.
How is it that these strange and powerful laws, and these laws alone, apply to the world?
Dunno. Can’t know. It’s foolish to pretend otherwise.
There are those who will say that the question has no answer —that it lies at or beyond the limits of human thought. And there are those who will say that the question has an answer, but that it is answered not by reason but by faith.
Yes, but that’s just a self-serving way to say “I don’t know”. A pretense of knowing when one does not know.
I say that perhaps, in the end, they are the same position. That is what Kant believed. You find out the limits of scientific understanding, he said. And beyond those limits lies the realm of morality, commitment and trust.
“Beyond” is problematic, here. Morality doesn’t lie “beyond”, or “within”, but rather moves along an orthogonal axis. Morality isn’t “beyond” science any more west is “beyond” north.
Kant, who destroyed all the systems of metaphysics and dug a grave for theology, was also a believer, who, as he put it, “attacked the claims of reason in order to make room for those of faith.”
And an admirable job he did – philosophy is as ungrounded and subjective as theology. But Kant operates from an abstraction, the mind removed from the human animal, which makes him effective in exposing philosophy qua philosophy as being every bit as bankrupt as theology, but ignores the reality of humans as animals, sentient beings in the real world. We might look to Hume as well, and note that we cannot deductively establish the inevitability of the sun coming up tomorrow, but for Kant, Hume and Nietzsche the salient reality of humans as hardwired to treat reality as reality and empiricism as nomologically authoritative means their arguments fall victim to the very criticisms they have launched: the human mind is not an abstraction, but a biological machine in a real world context, hard wired for certain “axiomatic” modes of understanding and operation.
Real world to Kant: your brain is a biological machine, and can’t help but embrace necessarily many of the “leaps” you decry as “leaps”. Humans are wired to make such leaps, and musing that such leaps are not “reasonable” in the abstract is to simply ignore the core facts of human cognition.
You have a bias for scientism. Even the thinkers of the Enlightenment, having argued the claims of faith to be without rational foundation, did not then dismiss religion, as one might dismiss a refuted theory. Many of them went on to draw the conclusion that religion must therefore have some other origin than the pursuit of scientific knowledge, and some other psychic function than providing a world-view that consoles those who subscribe to it.
Yes, but they had the were operating without knowledge available to them that we have available today. I don’t doubt that for Jefferson, it was very hard to imagine how the various species in the world came to be in all their diversity and splendor without a “cosmic designer”, even as a rational a thinker as he was. Humans are predisposed psychologically toward telic inferences, and ignorance tends to give way to suspicions of teleology, demonstrably. But Jefferson simply didn’t have the insights of Darwin and all the evidence that overturns our intuitions and arguments from ignorance today.
The ease with which the common doctrines of religion could be refuted alerted thinkers like Jacobi, Schiller and Schelling to the thought that religion is not, in its essence, a matter of doctrine, but of something else. And they set out to discover what that something else might be.
Yes, but this begs the question: why would some non-scientific pursuit of an answer be seen as having any good prospects at all? Science is not an oracle, and is quite limited, but what it can learn and demonstrate, it can
demonstrate. Some theological investigation can’t hope to show anything at all. Why should we even suppose that such an effort could
possibly bear fruit, never mind identifying cases where it has done so? If you don’t have a coherent model for what is an answer vs. a non-answer, it’s appropriate to ask if one is pursuing knowledge or answers at all.
Rather than THINK a little harder you dismiss “theism” and claim your ideas are grounded in something that provides “evidence” or “proof.” Do me a favor. Read this and see if you still feel so secure:
Ugh. That’s a fail on the same lines as Plantinga’s EAAN – why should objective truth-finding be valuable for survival. Even the lowly cockroach is a marvel of objective truth-finding, a basic insight of science that Hoffman apparently can’t see. How does the cockroach acquire food? It must use its senses (antennae, etc. – the cockroach has a remarkably acute sense of smell!) to locate, identify and acquire food, for example. If it couldn’t discriminate between features of its surrounding that objectively obtain – food from non-food, it wouldn’t survive, or more to the point, there’d be no cockroach species to talk about, and to suggest was somehow not in touch with objective reality.
-TS