Touchstone
*
Religion may not poison everything (I don’t think it does), but presuppositional apologetics is as pure a poison as religion can produce, intellectually. And, yes, I’m aware this is precisely the reaction a presuppositionalist expects and desires, for his cynicism and animus overwhelms any good will or basis for common ground or even honest discussion between Christianity and hostile worldviews. All is war, all is jihad for the presuppositionalist, and there can be no neutral ground, no comity with infidels and kufr. *
Go to any atheist website and find out how much good will there is toward Christians. Atheism spoils everything, including the atheist who is with Islam in waging jihad against Christ.
Well, as a Christian, you can go to freeratio and get a faceful of venom if you try (and often enough, even if you don’t), but even if so, you have a standing in terms of being able to own your ideas and be credited for believing what you believe and thinking what you think that a presuppositionalist will deny you.
The nature of presuppositionalism is pre-emptive, and canceling. It removes the legitimacy of the ground the other part is standing on. Opponents aren’t just wrong or mistaken, but incapable of reasoning in their “fallen noetic state”, and deny what they know to be the truth, which is what
believe (how convenient).
I don’t care what the disagreement may be, or even how personal or insulting the exchange may be, all is lost if all common ground is denied and annihilated. There is no more fundamental animus than that. That’s what so terrifying about something like the Holocaust, or a “Terminator” in a sci-fi flick. It can’t be reasoned with, or even engaged, there is no common ground to work from, only unreasoning, unbending programming, dogma, certainty,
Where there is common ground, there is at least hope. Presuppositionalism is the maximal fail, the shortest route to enmity. That’s why it’s cherished and valued, as well as despised.
So, if an atheist is going all presuppositionalist on you, a pox on him or her, and you can take me up on an invite to help go rip him/her to shreds, where it is. But at
freeratio.org of AtBC or whatever, you may have your argument assaulted six ways from Sunday, but they will provide you with at least the basic decency of owning your own ideas, believing what you say, and some capacity to reason and process inbound concepts and arguments at some level. A van Til/Bahnsen style presuppositionalist will deny you that, the slime.
According to Anne Gardiner:
“First published in German in the mid-1950s, Christ in Dachau is a deeply moving account by Fr. John Lenz of the five years he spent in a concentration camp in Bavaria from 1940 to 1945. Perhaps the most striking aspect of his account is that it reveals how atheists of all stripes – criminals, socialists, communists, and SS agents – joined forces in Dachau to persecute Catholic priests.”
How’s that for atheist jihad?
There are, to be sure, atheist criminals and haters of any stripe you’d like to name. But it’s a basic error in reasoning to suppose that set represents the whole; many atheists are kind and considerate, fair, just and charitable. It’s really important to keep that in mind, for myself as well, as it is tempting, looking back – the most despicable people in my life, the most abusive, dishonest, selfish and malevolent people were Christians. Not just devout Christians. It’s all too easy to make the mistake of thinking those bad apples are what the whole barrel consists of.
Some of the finest people I know are Christians, of course. Also kind and considerate, fair, just and charitable. Neither atheism, Catholicism, or any other ‘ism’ I am thinking of is capable of ensuring the good apples and preventing bad apples in the mix.
But the worst of the worst, intellectually, hands down, are the presuppositionalists. Young Earth Creationism isn’t too far behind and is really a powerful engine for forcing otherwise decent people into all manners of deceit, denialism, animus and dishonesty they otherwise wouldn’t begin to embrace – and surprisingly, there’s a strong faction ot that noxiousness right here in this forum. But many, many Catholics I know, including some here, are wonderful examples of benevolence, thoughtfulness, and intellectual good will, affirming the common ground men of good will can have and share, even in light of severe and deep disagreements about very basic features of one’s world view.
That’s a source of hope, and one that the presup foregoes, a kind of blackening of the human soul for a cheap bit of rhetorical leverage where he cannot engage his fellow man on the level.
-TS