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Keblinger

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Dawkins failed.

| Monday, June 20, 2011
salam:)

ever heard of 'The God Delusion' by Richard Dawkins? The following article insyaAllah will be helpful to us.

NB. it's time we begin to take reading seriously and do some intelligent reading instead? Harry Potter is sooo tweenies:)

seekthetruth-islam:

Draft 0.2 By Hamza TzortzisWhen I picked up  “The God Delusion” by Richard Dawkins, I was expecting to encounter new  reasons put forward to form a positive case for the Atheist worldview,  but I have to say that I was disappointed. What I read were rehashed,  incoherent arguments that made me realize that Richard Dawkins is not  very well read in philosophy. In light of this I thought it would be  useful to respond to his main arguments in the following way:1. Respond to what Dawkins considers his central argument;2. Respond to what Philosophers consider his best argument.Responding to what Dawkins considers his central argumentOn pages 157-158 of “The God Delusion,” Dawkins summarises what he calls “the central argument of my book”:1.  One of the greatest challenges to the human intellect has been to  explain how the complex, improbable appearance of design in the universe  arises.2. The natural temptation is to attribute the appearance of design to actual design itself.3.  The temptation is a false one because the designer hypothesis  immediately raises the larger problem of who designed the designer.4.  The most ingenious and powerful explanation is Darwinism evolution by  natural selection and we don’t have an equivalent explanation for  physics.5. We should not give up the hope of a better explanation arising in physics, something as powerful as Darwinism is for biology.God almost certainly does not exist.Preliminary NoteBefore  I go into Dawkins’ main points, I would like to address his conclusion  “God almost certainly does not exist.” My main issue is – how does he  conclude that God doesn’t exist from the above statements? It seems to  me that his conclusion just jumps out of thin air, to infer that God  does not exist just shows how invalid his argument is. It seems to me  that the only delusion is Dawkins’ conviction that his argument is “a  very serious argument against God’s existence.”If we could  conclude anything from Dawkins’ argument it would be that we should not  infer that God exists based on the design of the universe. However, even  if that is true, it doesn’t mean that God doesn’t exist; we can believe  in God’s existence from other arguments, which include:• The argument from morality;• The miracle of the Qur’an;• The cosmological argument;• The argument from personal experience;• The argument from consciousness.If  we were to accept all of Dawkins’ statements, it would not be enough to  reject the idea that God exists, and it certainly does not provide a  case for Atheism. However, many of his statements are false. Let us take  his statements and respond accordingly.Statement #1:  One of the greatest challenges to the human intellect has been to  explain how the complex, improbable appearance of design in the universe  arises.I believe that it is only a challenge if you  wish to take God out of the picture. It is indeed a challenge if you  presume atheism to be true. However for someone who is reflective and  thinks deeply about things, I think the simplest and the best  explanation - with the greatest explanatory power - is that there is a  supernatural designer. The next point will address why God makes sense  of the design in the universe.Statement #2: The natural temptation is to attribute the appearance of design to actual design itself.
This  is not only a natural temptation but a rational conclusion brought to  light based upon the fine-tuning of the initial conditions of the  universe. Let me start off by presenting the premises of this argument:1. The fine-tuning of the universe to permit life is due to physical necessity, chance, or design.2. It is not due to physical necessity or chance.3. Therefore, it is due to design.Explaining Premise OneThe  existence of a life permitting universe is due to conditions that must  have been fined-tuned to a degree that is literally incalculable. Take  the following examples:• The Strength of Gravity & the Atomic Weak Force: Physicist P. C. W. Davies has calculated that a change in the strength  of gravity or of the atomic weak force by only one part in 10100 would  have prevented a life permitting universe.• Big Bang’s Low Entropy Condition: Roger Penrose of Oxford University has calculated that the odds of the  Big Bang’s low entropy condition existing by chance are on the order of  one out of 1010 (123). Penrose  comments, “I cannot even recall seeing anything else in physics whose  accuracy is known to approach, even remotely, a figure like one part in  1010 (123).”• Volume of the phase space of possible universes: Roger Penrose of Oxford University states “In order to produce a  universe resembling the one in which we live, the Creator would have to  aim for an absurdly tiny volume of the phase space of possible  universes” Now, how tiny is this volume? According to Penrose the volume  of the phase space would be 1/10 to the power of X which is 10123.  This is smaller than the ratio of a Proton! This precision is much,  much greater than the precision that would be required to hit an  individual proton if the entire universe were a dartboard!There are only  three possible explanations for the presence of the above fine tuning  of the universe:1. Physical necessity;2. Chance;3. Design.Why it cannot be Physical NecessityThe  first alternative seems extraordinarily implausible. There is just no  physical reason why these constants and quantities should have the  values they do. As P. C. W. Davies states:“Even if the laws of physics  were unique, it doesn’t follow that the physical universe itself is  unique…the laws of physics must be augmented by cosmic initial  conditions…there is nothing in present ideas about ‘laws of initial  conditions’ remotely to suggest that their consistency with the laws of  physics would imply uniqueness. Far from it…it seems, then, that the  physical universe does not have to be the way it is: it could have been  otherwise.”Additionally if anyone was to take the view that the  fine-tuning of the universe to permit life is due to physical necessity  that would mean that it would be impossible to have a universe not fit  for life! However as can be seen by the examples above, a slight change  of any of the values or constants would mean the universe could not  permit life.Why it cannot be Chance Some  people who do not understand the impossibility of the universe coming  into being by chance exclaim, “It could have happened by chance!”  However would they say chance explains how an elephant was sleeping in  their garage overnight? Or how a 747 ended up parked in their garden?Even  after their irrational perspective is highlighted, they still hold on  to the theory that the universe can exist due to chance. In response to  this I would argue that it is not just about chance but something the  theorists call “specified probability.” Specified probability is a  probability that also conforms to an independent pattern. To illustrate  this, imagine you have a monkey in a room for twenty-four hours, typing a  way on your laptop. In the morning you enter the room and you see, “O  Romeo, O Romeo, where art thou O Romeo? Deny thy father and deny thy  name…” The monkey has miraculously written out a Shakespearian sonnet!  What you may have expected is random words such as “house,” “car,” and  “apple.” However, in this case not only have you seen the improbability  of typing intelligible English words – but they also conform to the  independent pattern of English grammar! This is the same case with  accepting that the fine-tuning of the universe to permit life was just  by chance.It must be DesignSince  premises one and two are true, it follows that supernatural design is  the most reasonable explanation for the fine-tuning of the universe to  permit life.Statement #3: The temptation is a false one  because the designer hypothesis immediately raises the larger problem of  who designed the designer.The above statement, which  is a contention to the design argument is flawed for two main reasons.  First, anyone with a basic understanding of the philosophy of science  will conclude that in the inference to the best explanation, the best  explanation does not require an explanation! The following example  illustrates this point.Imagine 500 years from now, a group of  archaeologists start digging in London’s Hyde Park only to find parts of  a car and a bus. They would be completely justified in inferring that  these finds were not the result of sedimentation and metamorphosis but  products of an unknown civilization. However if some skeptics were to  argue that we cannot make such inferences because we do not know  anything about this civilization, how they lived and who created them,  would that make the archaeologists conclusions untrue? Of course not!Second,  if we take this contention seriously it could undermine the very  foundations of science and philosophy themselves. If we require an  explanation for the basic assumptions of science, for example that the  external world exists, where do you think our level of scientific  progress would be?Additionally if we were to apply this type of  question to every attempt at explaining the explanation, we would end up  with an infinite regression of explanations. And an infinite regression  of explanations would defeat the whole purpose of science in the first  place – which is to provide an explanation!A Note on Rejecting the Supernatural Dawkins’  also rejects a supernatural designer because he thinks, as an  explanation, it lack explanatory power; in other words, no advance is  made. He raises this objection because he feels that a supernatural  designer is just as complex as design. However Dawkins’ objection is  problematic as he assumes that a supernatural designer is as complex as  the universe. But a supernatural designer, in other words God, is one of  the simplest concepts understood by all. This opinion is expressed by  many Philosophers including the famous atheist turned theist Professor  Anthony Flew.Dawkins’ other assumption is that God is made of  many parts; however, God is immaterial, transcendent and one. Just  because God can do complex things does not make him complex, it seems to  me that Dawkins confuses ability with nature. In other words, just  because God can do complex things (such as creating the universe) it  does not make His nature complex.So it stands to reason that God is the simplest, and therefore the best, explanation.Statement  #4: The most ingenious and powerful explanation is Darwinism evolution  by natural selection and and we don’t have an equivalent explanation for  physics.This statement is irrelevant due to the following reasons:1. Evolution does not have its foot in the door;2. Evolution is based upon incalculable probabilities;3. Evolution is impossible because we have not spent enough time on Earth yet.Let me expand upon these points.1. Evolution does not have its foot in the doorWith  regards to the existence of God, evolution does not even have its foot  in the door; it’s about nine billion years away if we use the  fine-tuning argument mentioned above. Simply put, evolution has no say.2. Evolution is based upon incalculable probabilitiesThe  odds against assembling the human genome spontaneously are  incalculable. The probability of assembling the genome is between 4-180 to 4-110,000 and 4-360 to 4-110,000.  These numbers give some feel for the unlikelihood of the species Homo  sapiens. And if anyone were to accept evolution by chance, they would  have to believe in a miracle as these numbers are so high! Therefore  evolution itself would prove the existence of God!3. Evolution is impossible because we have not had enough time on Earth yet  According to John D. Barrow and Frank J. Tipler, the calculated odds of assembling a single gene are between and 4-180 to 4-360.  The implications of this are that there simply has not been sufficient  time since the formation of the earth to try a number of nucleotide base  combinations that can even remotely compare to these numbers!Statement  #5: We should not give up the hope of a better explanation arising in  physics, something as powerful as Darwinism is for biology.Dawkins  basically says that since there is a naturalistic explanation for the  apparent design in species and we do not have a similar explanation for  physics, we should just wait. Does this not sound like blind faith to  you? The statement presumes scientific naturalism to be the only way of  establishing facts or sound conclusions. Why else would he want to wait  for a naturalistic explanation?Dawkins’ presumption that scientific  naturalism is the only way to establish facts is not true because  scientific naturalism cannot prove:1. Logical truths such as  mathematics - in actuality, logical truths are required to prove  scientific naturalism. To argue the other way round would be tantamount  to arguing in a circle.2. Aesthetic truths such as beauty.3. Moral truths such as right and wrong.Finally,  scientific naturalism is self-defeating as the statement “scientific  naturalism is the only method to use to establish facts” cannot be  proven using scientific naturalism!It can be seen from the above  that Dawkins’ central argument fails and is an embarrassment to the  scientific community, as atheist Philosopher Michael Ruse explains,  “…unlike the new atheists, I take scholarship seriously. I have written  that The God Delusion made me ashamed to be an atheist and I meant it.  Trying to understand how God could need no cause, Christians claim that  God exists necessarily. I have taken the effort to try to understand  what that means. Dawkins and company are ignorant of such claims and  positively contemptuous of those who even try to understand them, let  alone believe them. Thus, like a first-year undergraduate, he can  happily go around asking loudly, “What caused God?” as though he had  made some momentous philosophical discovery.”Responding to what Philosophers consider his best argumentAccording  to Philosopher and lecturer at Yale University, Gregory E. Granssle,  Dawkins’ strongest argument can be found on page 55: “A universe with a  creative superintendent would be a very different kind of universe from  one without.”Dawkins’ argument can be summarised in the following way:1. A universe created by God would be different than the one created by nature;2. The universe we live in fits better to a universe created by nature;3. Therefore the universe we live in is most likely to have been created by nature.I  would argue that Dawkins’ argument couldn’t be any further away from  the truth; this is because the universe that we live in actually makes  more sense being created by God for the following reasons.1. The universe is ordered and open to rational anaylsisIf  God did not exist, the universe would not display the order it does,  and it would not be finely-tuned to permit our existence. Professor  Roger Penrose states, “There is a certain sense in which I would say the  universe has a purpose. It’s not there just somehow by chance…I don’t  think that’s a very fruitful or helpful way of looking at the  universe.”Additionally, the very fact that we can observe and  perform rational analysis on the patterns we perceive in the universe  makes more sense if God did exist, because in a naturalistic universe  things would be expected to be more chaotic. This does not mean a  universe without a God could not be ordered; however it is more likely  that God would create an ordered universe, and since the universe we  live in is ordered it makes sense that God’s existence fits well with  our universe2. The universe contains conscious and aware beings A  universe that contains consciousness and awareness makes sense with the  existence of God. A universe without a God would be very different to  the one we are living in.ExplanationHuman  beings experience things all the time. This article you are reading is  an experience; even talking about your experience is an experience.  However the ultimate reality that we know from any experience is the one  who experiences it – in other words ourselves. When we realise that  there is a first-person, an “I”, “me” or “mine,” we come to face a  profound mystery. The Philosopher Roy Abraham Varghese puts it nicely  when he wrote, “To reverse Descartes, ‘I am, therefore I think…’ Who  is this ‘I’? ‘Where’ is it? How did it come to be? Your self is not just  something physical.”The self is not a physical thing; it is not  contained in any cell or biological structure. The most unchallenged  and intuitive reality is that we are all aware, but we cannot describe  or explain what this awareness is. One thing that we can be sure of is  that the self cannot be explained biologically or chemically. The main  reason for this is that science does not discover the self; it is  actually the other way round. For science to try and explain the truth  of the self would be tantamount to arguing in a circle! Even scientists  recognise this; the physicist Gerald Schroeder points out that there is  no real difference between a heap of sand and the brain of an Einstein.  The advocates of a physical explanation for the self end up in a muddle  as they require answers to even bigger questions, such as “How can  certain bits of matter suddenly create a new reality that has no  resemblance to matter?”So if the self cannot be explained  physically then the next question must be asked: “How did it come to  be?” The history of the universe indicates that consciousness  spontaneously arose, and language emerged without any evolutionary  forerunner. So where did it come from? Even the neo-atheists have failed  to come to terms with the nature of the self and its source, because no  physical explanation is coherent enough to be convincing. Even Richard  Dawkins almost admits defeat concerning the self and consciousness; he  states, “We don’t know. We don’t understand it.”The best  explanation for the nature and source of the self is that it came from a  source that is thinking, aware and conscious. How else can the self,  which is an entity with a capacity to reflect and experience, manifest  itself? It cannot have come from unconscious matter incapable to  experience and ponder. Simply put, matter cannot produce concepts and  perceptions, therefore we can conclude that the self cannot have a  material basis but must have come from a living source that transcends  the material world; and this is best explained by God. No other answer  provides an adequate explanation for this phenomenon.3. The universe contains objective morality We  all believe that killing 6 million Jews during World War II was morally  wrong, however not only do we believe it was morally wrong we believe  it was objectively morally wrong. What I mean by objective is that if  the Nazis had successfully taken over Europe and brainwashed us to  believe that it was ok to commit genocide, it would still be objectively  morally wrong regardless of human experience. However since our  universe contains objective morality then it can only make sense with  God’s existence, because God is required as rational basis for objective  morality. Without God morality is subjective, because God is the only  conceptual anchor that transcends human subjectivity. So the universe  with objective morality makes no sense without God. In this light the  Muslim or theist may argue:1. If God does not exist, then objective moral values do not exist;2. The universe with objective moral values does exist;3. Therefore, God exists.Explaining the key premiseThe  question about objective good or bad, in other words objective  morality, has been discussed by many theists and non-theists alike. Many  have concluded that there is no objective morality without God.  Humanist philosopher Paul Kurtz aptly puts it as,“The central question  about moral and ethical principles concerns this ontological foundation.  If they are neither derived from God nor anchored in some transcendent  ground, are they purely ephemeral?”Paul Kurtz is right; God is  the only conceptual anchor that transcends human subjectivity, so  without God there is no rational basis for objective morality. To  explain this further let us discuss alternative conceptual foundations  for morality.In God’s absence, there are only two alternative conceptual foundations  1. Social pressure  2. EvolutionBoth  social pressures and evolution provide no objective basis for morality  as they both claim that our morality is contingent on changes:  biological and social. Therefore morality cannot be binding – true  regardless of who believes in them. Therefore without God, there is no  objective basis for morality. God as a concept is not subjective,  therefore having God as the basis for morality makes them binding and  objective, because God transcends human subjectivity. The following  statement by Richard Taylor, an eminent ethicist, correctly concludes,“Contemporary  writers in ethics, who blithely discourse upon moral right and wrong  and moral obligation without any reference to religion, are really just  weaving intellectual webs from thin air; which amounts to saying that  they discourse without meaning.”Since the universe contains  objective morality, and Gods existence is necessary as a conceptual  foundation for objective morals, then the universe we live in makes  sense with the existence of God.  A Quick Note on Religious “Evils”Before  I conclude I would like to highlight that a response to Dawkins’ other  contentions with the concept of God and religious life. Dawkins seems to  attribute all the negative and evil things to religion. However there  is a strong argument that these things are not unique to religion  itself, but the common conceptual dominator is humanity. This is  summarised well by Keith Ward, the former Regius Professor of Divinity  at the University of Oxford, he writes, ‘“It is very difficult to think  of any organised human activity that could not be corrupted…The lesson  is that anti-religious corruptions and religious corruptions are both  possible. There is no magic system or belief, not even belief in liberal  democracy, which can be guaranteed to prevent it.”To illustrate  this let me use the outdated cliché of “religions are the cause war and  conflict” and show how war and conflict are not unique to religions. In  the relatively short history of secularism the following massacres have  committed in the name of non-religious ideologies such a communism and  social-Darwinism:• 70,000,000 under chairman Mao• 20,000,000 under Stalin• 2,000,000 no longer exist because of Pol Pot• 700,000 innocent Iraqi’s in the current occupation• 500,000 Iraqi children in the 10 year sanctionsSo  it can be clearly seen above that war and conflict are not religious  monopolies, rather they are human phenomena and not unique to religion.Conclusion
This  article attempted to respond to Richard Dawkins’ best-seller “The God  Delusion” by responding to his central argument and the argument that  Philosophers consider to be his best. However, intellectual gymnastics -  no matter how truthful - seldom convinces others, so I thought it would  best to allow the expression of God – the Qur’an – to have the final  say. In the wonderful eloquence and sublime style God says,In  the creation of the heavens and Earth, and the alternation of the night  and day, and the ships which sail the seas to people’s benefit, and the  water which God sends down from the sky – by which He brings the Earth  to life when it was dead and scatters about in it creatures of every  kind – and the varying direction of the winds, and the clouds  subservient between heaven and Earth, there are signs for people who use  their intellect. Qur’an, 2:164

seekthetruth-islam:
Draft 0.2 By Hamza Tzortzis

When I picked up “The God Delusion” by Richard Dawkins, I was expecting to encounter new reasons put forward to form a positive case for the Atheist worldview, but I have to say that I was disappointed. What I read were rehashed, incoherent arguments that made me realize that Richard Dawkins is not very well read in philosophy. In light of this I thought it would be useful to respond to his main arguments in the following way:

1. Respond to what Dawkins considers his central argument;
2. Respond to what Philosophers consider his best argument.

Responding to what Dawkins considers his central argument
On pages 157-158 of “The God Delusion,” Dawkins summarises what he calls “the central argument of my book”:

1. One of the greatest challenges to the human intellect has been to explain how the complex, improbable appearance of design in the universe arises.
2. The natural temptation is to attribute the appearance of design to actual design itself.
3. The temptation is a false one because the designer hypothesis immediately raises the larger problem of who designed the designer.
4. The most ingenious and powerful explanation is Darwinism evolution by natural selection and we don’t have an equivalent explanation for physics.
5. We should not give up the hope of a better explanation arising in physics, something as powerful as Darwinism is for biology.

God almost certainly does not exist.

Preliminary Note

Before I go into Dawkins’ main points, I would like to address his conclusion “God almost certainly does not exist.” My main issue is – how does he conclude that God doesn’t exist from the above statements? It seems to me that his conclusion just jumps out of thin air, to infer that God does not exist just shows how invalid his argument is. It seems to me that the only delusion is Dawkins’ conviction that his argument is “a very serious argument against God’s existence.”

If we could conclude anything from Dawkins’ argument it would be that we should not infer that God exists based on the design of the universe. However, even if that is true, it doesn’t mean that God doesn’t exist; we can believe in God’s existence from other arguments, which include:

• The argument from morality;
• The miracle of the Qur’an;
• The cosmological argument;
• The argument from personal experience;
• The argument from consciousness.

If we were to accept all of Dawkins’ statements, it would not be enough to reject the idea that God exists, and it certainly does not provide a case for Atheism. However, many of his statements are false. Let us take his statements and respond accordingly.

Statement #1: One of the greatest challenges to the human intellect has been to explain how the complex, improbable appearance of design in the universe arises.
I believe that it is only a challenge if you wish to take God out of the picture. It is indeed a challenge if you presume atheism to be true. However for someone who is reflective and thinks deeply about things, I think the simplest and the best explanation - with the greatest explanatory power - is that there is a supernatural designer. The next point will address why God makes sense of the design in the universe.

Statement #2: The natural temptation is to attribute the appearance of design to actual design itself.
This is not only a natural temptation but a rational conclusion brought to light based upon the fine-tuning of the initial conditions of the universe. Let me start off by presenting the premises of this argument:

1. The fine-tuning of the universe to permit life is due to physical necessity, chance, or design.
2. It is not due to physical necessity or chance.
3. Therefore, it is due to design.

Explaining Premise One

The existence of a life permitting universe is due to conditions that must have been fined-tuned to a degree that is literally incalculable. Take the following examples:

The Strength of Gravity & the Atomic Weak Force: Physicist P. C. W. Davies has calculated that a change in the strength of gravity or of the atomic weak force by only one part in 10100 would have prevented a life permitting universe.
Big Bang’s Low Entropy Condition: Roger Penrose of Oxford University has calculated that the odds of the Big Bang’s low entropy condition existing by chance are on the order of one out of 1010 (123). Penrose comments, “I cannot even recall seeing anything else in physics whose accuracy is known to approach, even remotely, a figure like one part in 1010 (123).”
Volume of the phase space of possible universes: Roger Penrose of Oxford University states “In order to produce a universe resembling the one in which we live, the Creator would have to aim for an absurdly tiny volume of the phase space of possible universes” Now, how tiny is this volume? According to Penrose the volume of the phase space would be 1/10 to the power of X which is 10123. This is smaller than the ratio of a Proton! This precision is much, much greater than the precision that would be required to hit an individual proton if the entire universe were a dartboard!There are only three possible explanations for the presence of the above fine tuning of the universe:

1. Physical necessity;
2. Chance;
3. Design.

Why it cannot be Physical Necessity

The first alternative seems extraordinarily implausible. There is just no physical reason why these constants and quantities should have the values they do. As P. C. W. Davies states:“Even if the laws of physics were unique, it doesn’t follow that the physical universe itself is unique…the laws of physics must be augmented by cosmic initial conditions…there is nothing in present ideas about ‘laws of initial conditions’ remotely to suggest that their consistency with the laws of physics would imply uniqueness. Far from it…it seems, then, that the physical universe does not have to be the way it is: it could have been otherwise.”

Additionally if anyone was to take the view that the fine-tuning of the universe to permit life is due to physical necessity that would mean that it would be impossible to have a universe not fit for life! However as can be seen by the examples above, a slight change of any of the values or constants would mean the universe could not permit life.

Why it cannot be Chance Some people who do not understand the impossibility of the universe coming into being by chance exclaim, “It could have happened by chance!” However would they say chance explains how an elephant was sleeping in their garage overnight? Or how a 747 ended up parked in their garden?

Even after their irrational perspective is highlighted, they still hold on to the theory that the universe can exist due to chance. In response to this I would argue that it is not just about chance but something the theorists call “specified probability.” Specified probability is a probability that also conforms to an independent pattern. To illustrate this, imagine you have a monkey in a room for twenty-four hours, typing a way on your laptop. In the morning you enter the room and you see, “O Romeo, O Romeo, where art thou O Romeo? Deny thy father and deny thy name…” The monkey has miraculously written out a Shakespearian sonnet! What you may have expected is random words such as “house,” “car,” and “apple.” However, in this case not only have you seen the improbability of typing intelligible English words – but they also conform to the independent pattern of English grammar! This is the same case with accepting that the fine-tuning of the universe to permit life was just by chance.

It must be Design
Since premises one and two are true, it follows that supernatural design is the most reasonable explanation for the fine-tuning of the universe to permit life.

Statement #3: The temptation is a false one because the designer hypothesis immediately raises the larger problem of who designed the designer.
The above statement, which is a contention to the design argument is flawed for two main reasons. First, anyone with a basic understanding of the philosophy of science will conclude that in the inference to the best explanation, the best explanation does not require an explanation! The following example illustrates this point.Imagine 500 years from now, a group of archaeologists start digging in London’s Hyde Park only to find parts of a car and a bus. They would be completely justified in inferring that these finds were not the result of sedimentation and metamorphosis but products of an unknown civilization. However if some skeptics were to argue that we cannot make such inferences because we do not know anything about this civilization, how they lived and who created them, would that make the archaeologists conclusions untrue? Of course not!

Second, if we take this contention seriously it could undermine the very foundations of science and philosophy themselves. If we require an explanation for the basic assumptions of science, for example that the external world exists, where do you think our level of scientific progress would be?

Additionally if we were to apply this type of question to every attempt at explaining the explanation, we would end up with an infinite regression of explanations. And an infinite regression of explanations would defeat the whole purpose of science in the first place – which is to provide an explanation!

A Note on Rejecting the Supernatural Dawkins’ also rejects a supernatural designer because he thinks, as an explanation, it lack explanatory power; in other words, no advance is made. He raises this objection because he feels that a supernatural designer is just as complex as design. However Dawkins’ objection is problematic as he assumes that a supernatural designer is as complex as the universe. But a supernatural designer, in other words God, is one of the simplest concepts understood by all. This opinion is expressed by many Philosophers including the famous atheist turned theist Professor Anthony Flew.

Dawkins’ other assumption is that God is made of many parts; however, God is immaterial, transcendent and one. Just because God can do complex things does not make him complex, it seems to me that Dawkins confuses ability with nature. In other words, just because God can do complex things (such as creating the universe) it does not make His nature complex.

So it stands to reason that God is the simplest, and therefore the best, explanation.

Statement #4: The most ingenious and powerful explanation is Darwinism evolution by natural selection and and we don’t have an equivalent explanation for physics.

This statement is irrelevant due to the following reasons:

1. Evolution does not have its foot in the door;
2. Evolution is based upon incalculable probabilities;
3. Evolution is impossible because we have not spent enough time on Earth yet.

Let me expand upon these points.

1. Evolution does not have its foot in the door

With regards to the existence of God, evolution does not even have its foot in the door; it’s about nine billion years away if we use the fine-tuning argument mentioned above. Simply put, evolution has no say.

2. Evolution is based upon incalculable probabilities

The odds against assembling the human genome spontaneously are incalculable. The probability of assembling the genome is between 4-180 to 4-110,000 and 4-360 to 4-110,000. These numbers give some feel for the unlikelihood of the species Homo sapiens. And if anyone were to accept evolution by chance, they would have to believe in a miracle as these numbers are so high! Therefore evolution itself would prove the existence of God!

3. Evolution is impossible because we have not had enough time on Earth yet According to John D. Barrow and Frank J. Tipler, the calculated odds of assembling a single gene are between and 4-180 to 4-360. The implications of this are that there simply has not been sufficient time since the formation of the earth to try a number of nucleotide base combinations that can even remotely compare to these numbers!

Statement #5: We should not give up the hope of a better explanation arising in physics, something as powerful as Darwinism is for biology.
Dawkins basically says that since there is a naturalistic explanation for the apparent design in species and we do not have a similar explanation for physics, we should just wait. Does this not sound like blind faith to you? The statement presumes scientific naturalism to be the only way of establishing facts or sound conclusions. Why else would he want to wait for a naturalistic explanation?Dawkins’ presumption that scientific naturalism is the only way to establish facts is not true because scientific naturalism cannot prove:

1. Logical truths such as mathematics - in actuality, logical truths are required to prove scientific naturalism. To argue the other way round would be tantamount to arguing in a circle.
2. Aesthetic truths such as beauty.
3. Moral truths such as right and wrong.

Finally, scientific naturalism is self-defeating as the statement “scientific naturalism is the only method to use to establish facts” cannot be proven using scientific naturalism!

It can be seen from the above that Dawkins’ central argument fails and is an embarrassment to the scientific community, as atheist Philosopher Michael Ruse explains, “…unlike the new atheists, I take scholarship seriously. I have written that The God Delusion made me ashamed to be an atheist and I meant it. Trying to understand how God could need no cause, Christians claim that God exists necessarily. I have taken the effort to try to understand what that means. Dawkins and company are ignorant of such claims and positively contemptuous of those who even try to understand them, let alone believe them. Thus, like a first-year undergraduate, he can happily go around asking loudly, “What caused God?” as though he had made some momentous philosophical discovery.”

Responding to what Philosophers consider his best argument

According to Philosopher and lecturer at Yale University, Gregory E. Granssle, Dawkins’ strongest argument can be found on page 55: “A universe with a creative superintendent would be a very different kind of universe from one without.”

Dawkins’ argument can be summarised in the following way:

1. A universe created by God would be different than the one created by nature;
2. The universe we live in fits better to a universe created by nature;
3. Therefore the universe we live in is most likely to have been created by nature.

I would argue that Dawkins’ argument couldn’t be any further away from the truth; this is because the universe that we live in actually makes more sense being created by God for the following reasons.

1. The universe is ordered and open to rational anaylsis
If God did not exist, the universe would not display the order it does, and it would not be finely-tuned to permit our existence. Professor Roger Penrose states, “There is a certain sense in which I would say the universe has a purpose. It’s not there just somehow by chance…I don’t think that’s a very fruitful or helpful way of looking at the universe.”

Additionally, the very fact that we can observe and perform rational analysis on the patterns we perceive in the universe makes more sense if God did exist, because in a naturalistic universe things would be expected to be more chaotic. This does not mean a universe without a God could not be ordered; however it is more likely that God would create an ordered universe, and since the universe we live in is ordered it makes sense that God’s existence fits well with our universe
2. The universe contains conscious and aware beings A universe that contains consciousness and awareness makes sense with the existence of God. A universe without a God would be very different to the one we are living in.

Explanation
Human beings experience things all the time. This article you are reading is an experience; even talking about your experience is an experience. However the ultimate reality that we know from any experience is the one who experiences it – in other words ourselves. When we realise that there is a first-person, an “I”, “me” or “mine,” we come to face a profound mystery. The Philosopher Roy Abraham Varghese puts it nicely when he wrote, “To reverse Descartes, ‘I am, therefore I think…’ Who is this ‘I’? ‘Where’ is it? How did it come to be? Your self is not just something physical.”

The self is not a physical thing; it is not contained in any cell or biological structure. The most unchallenged and intuitive reality is that we are all aware, but we cannot describe or explain what this awareness is. One thing that we can be sure of is that the self cannot be explained biologically or chemically. The main reason for this is that science does not discover the self; it is actually the other way round. For science to try and explain the truth of the self would be tantamount to arguing in a circle! Even scientists recognise this; the physicist Gerald Schroeder points out that there is no real difference between a heap of sand and the brain of an Einstein. The advocates of a physical explanation for the self end up in a muddle as they require answers to even bigger questions, such as “How can certain bits of matter suddenly create a new reality that has no resemblance to matter?”

So if the self cannot be explained physically then the next question must be asked: “How did it come to be?” The history of the universe indicates that consciousness spontaneously arose, and language emerged without any evolutionary forerunner. So where did it come from? Even the neo-atheists have failed to come to terms with the nature of the self and its source, because no physical explanation is coherent enough to be convincing. Even Richard Dawkins almost admits defeat concerning the self and consciousness; he states, “We don’t know. We don’t understand it.”

The best explanation for the nature and source of the self is that it came from a source that is thinking, aware and conscious. How else can the self, which is an entity with a capacity to reflect and experience, manifest itself? It cannot have come from unconscious matter incapable to experience and ponder. Simply put, matter cannot produce concepts and perceptions, therefore we can conclude that the self cannot have a material basis but must have come from a living source that transcends the material world; and this is best explained by God. No other answer provides an adequate explanation for this phenomenon.

3. The universe contains objective morality We all believe that killing 6 million Jews during World War II was morally wrong, however not only do we believe it was morally wrong we believe it was objectively morally wrong. What I mean by objective is that if the Nazis had successfully taken over Europe and brainwashed us to believe that it was ok to commit genocide, it would still be objectively morally wrong regardless of human experience. However since our universe contains objective morality then it can only make sense with God’s existence, because God is required as rational basis for objective morality. Without God morality is subjective, because God is the only conceptual anchor that transcends human subjectivity. So the universe with objective morality makes no sense without God. In this light the Muslim or theist may argue:

1. If God does not exist, then objective moral values do not exist;
2. The universe with objective moral values does exist;
3. Therefore, God exists.

Explaining the key premise
The question about objective good or bad, in other words objective morality, has been discussed by many theists and non-theists alike. Many have concluded that there is no objective morality without God. Humanist philosopher Paul Kurtz aptly puts it as,“The central question about moral and ethical principles concerns this ontological foundation. If they are neither derived from God nor anchored in some transcendent ground, are they purely ephemeral?”

Paul Kurtz is right; God is the only conceptual anchor that transcends human subjectivity, so without God there is no rational basis for objective morality. To explain this further let us discuss alternative conceptual foundations for morality.

In God’s absence, there are only two alternative conceptual foundations 1. Social pressure 2. Evolution

Both social pressures and evolution provide no objective basis for morality as they both claim that our morality is contingent on changes: biological and social. Therefore morality cannot be binding – true regardless of who believes in them. Therefore without God, there is no objective basis for morality. God as a concept is not subjective, therefore having God as the basis for morality makes them binding and objective, because God transcends human subjectivity. The following statement by Richard Taylor, an eminent ethicist, correctly concludes,

“Contemporary writers in ethics, who blithely discourse upon moral right and wrong and moral obligation without any reference to religion, are really just weaving intellectual webs from thin air; which amounts to saying that they discourse without meaning.”

Since the universe contains objective morality, and Gods existence is necessary as a conceptual foundation for objective morals, then the universe we live in makes sense with the existence of God. A Quick Note on Religious “Evils”

Before I conclude I would like to highlight that a response to Dawkins’ other contentions with the concept of God and religious life. Dawkins seems to attribute all the negative and evil things to religion. However there is a strong argument that these things are not unique to religion itself, but the common conceptual dominator is humanity. This is summarised well by Keith Ward, the former Regius Professor of Divinity at the University of Oxford, he writes, ‘“It is very difficult to think of any organised human activity that could not be corrupted…The lesson is that anti-religious corruptions and religious corruptions are both possible. There is no magic system or belief, not even belief in liberal democracy, which can be guaranteed to prevent it.”

To illustrate this let me use the outdated cliché of “religions are the cause war and conflict” and show how war and conflict are not unique to religions. In the relatively short history of secularism the following massacres have committed in the name of non-religious ideologies such a communism and social-Darwinism:

• 70,000,000 under chairman Mao
• 20,000,000 under Stalin
• 2,000,000 no longer exist because of Pol Pot
• 700,000 innocent Iraqi’s in the current occupation
• 500,000 Iraqi children in the 10 year sanctions

So it can be clearly seen above that war and conflict are not religious monopolies, rather they are human phenomena and not unique to religion.

Conclusion
This article attempted to respond to Richard Dawkins’ best-seller “The God Delusion” by responding to his central argument and the argument that Philosophers consider to be his best. However, intellectual gymnastics - no matter how truthful - seldom convinces others, so I thought it would best to allow the expression of God – the Qur’an – to have the final say. In the wonderful eloquence and sublime style God says,

"In the creation of the heavens and Earth, and the alternation of the night and day, and the ships which sail the seas to people’s benefit, and the water which God sends down from the sky – by which He brings the Earth to life when it was dead and scatters about in it creatures of every kind – and the varying direction of the winds, and the clouds subservient between heaven and Earth, there are signs for people who use their intellect." Qur’an, 2:164

source: http://seekthetruth-islam.tumblr.com/post/6698749583/draft-0-2-by-hamza-tzortzis-when-i-picked-up-the
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