If I understand what you are saying, then you’re right–that is the key difference between “hard rationaism” and “soft rationalism.” Soft rationalism works cumulatively. In my opinion this is actually how most people make decisions most of the time. “Hard rationalism” isolates certain factors in order to try to establish a more solid, unquestionable foundation. Sometimes, for specific issues or given specific premises, that’s the right approach. Sometimes we need to talk about whether conclusion Y really follows from premise X, in isolation from other factors. But when discussing basic, fundamental beliefs, hard rationalism collapses. It seems to me that everyone who espouses hard rationalism is most likely being unwittingly disingenuous when they describe why they believe what they do. The language of hard rationalism simply can’t describe how real human beings actually make important decisions about the nature of the universe and the purpose of their own lives.
But there are plenty that are. For instance, we all do things that our conscience tells us are wrong. An adequate explanation needs to account for
- The fact that we have an intuition of wrongness
- The fact that we often do wrong things anyway
- The fact that we have a strong secondary intuition that our conscience (the intuition that something is right or wrong) is the most important among the various impulses that drive us, rightly regulating the others.
Atheism does not, in my opinion, adequately explain these things. It can explain them, but the explanations leave me scratching my head as to why, in their wake, atheists still think it so important to follow their consciences (point 3). If the conscience, like everything else, is a survival mechanism, why not ignore it in circumstances where it doesn’t help us survive and transmit our genes?
I’m not sure this works as a formal argument by the canons of hard rationalism. Certainly the non-believers to whom I’ve made the argument have not been impressed–they simply see no need for the level of “meta-explanation” provided by theism. But the fact that Christian faith does have an account of why conscience is so important,
and of why we go against it,
and of how we can be healed of the habit of going against it, is a strong point in its favor. (The fact that the healing seems to work only very imperfectly, as well as the intellectual difficulty of why God allowed matters to get into such an unsatisfactory state in the first place, are two of the strongest points
against Christianity, of course.)
In short, I’m talking about the way Christian faith (and other faiths, for that matter–the explanatory value of Buddhism is also very high) explains the observable facts of human experience.
I reject that premise. Beauty may be skin deep in the sense that a beautiful person may not be virtuous, but that is because the person’s physical beauty is reflecting the beauty of God rather than the person’s own beauty of character. I deny the claim that beauty ever exists without pointing beyond itself. If I didn’t deny that claim, I would probably not be a theist.
Obviously not directly, and I didn’t say that I knew any of this with anything approaching certainty through experience alone. I am simply saying that experience is one of the facts to be explained. In the case of the Trinity, experience plays a role in that we encounter the Son and the Spirit acting in our lives. But of course we name it that way because Christian tradition teaches us to–so as you pointed out earlier, this doesn’t work on its own.