MORTIMER J. ADLER ON THE IDEA OF GOD
(This
is a transcription from the original television series (1953-54) on The Great
Ideas.)
Welcome
to another discussion of "The Great Ideas." Today we're going to
consider the idea of God. It should not surprise you to learn that the idea of
a Supreme Being is itself supreme among "The Great Ideas." In the
Syntopicon where we were working on the 102 Great Ideas of Western thought we
found this out as we went through all of the 102 ideas, we found that the idea
of God was the idea to which there were more references in the literature of
western writings, poetry, philosophy, theology and science and references by
more diverse authors, different kinds of authors than occurred in the case of
any other idea; both in the extent of the references and the variety of the
references, the discussion of God is the largest single discussion that has
gone on in the intellectual tradition of the West.
Now
in this extraordinary discussion over twenty-five centuries there are four main
questions that have been raised and debated. The first is, does God exist? The
second is, what is God's nature? What is God like? The third is, can we know
God's existence and nature? Can we know God's existence and nature independent
of revelation and religious faith by the operation of reason, by the natural
processes of knowing? And finally, the fourth question is, what is God's
relation to the world and to man?
Now
to these four principle questions there are a number of answers, the names of
which I think you are acquainted with. Let me do this very quickly to just
remind you of the fundamental positions that men have taken on these four
questions. To the first question, does God exist? The basic issue is between
the atheist who says that God does not exist and all forms of affirmation.
There are many varieties and many different ways in which men affirm the
existence of God. All of these are opposed to the atheist.
Next
to the question, what is God's nature? What is God like? Some of the
fundamental oppositions, not all, some are the oppositions between the
polytheist who thinks of the divinity and the plurality of forms and the
monotheist who says that God is one. And among monotheists as we know in the
West, there are those who are Unitarian, that the divine nature is absolutely
simple; and Trinitarian, who find in the divine nature three persons in the
Godhead, as in the case of the Christian doctrine of the Trinity. And then
there are those who think of God as an impersonal force in the universe and
those who talk of a personal God. A God which is a spiritual being and a
spiritual being having an intellect and will in whose image man is made.
Next,
to the question, can we know God? Can we know God's existence and nature by the
natural processes of our minds? There is the answer first of all given by the
agnostic who denies not that God exists but who denies that we can know that
God exists or what God is like. And he is opposed by all, all those who in
various ways claim to have knowledge, natural knowledge of God.
And
finally, to the question, how is God related to the world and to man? There is
the double opposition here first between the deist and the theist. Deism holds
that God having created the world, set laws for it to obey and no longer
governs it, is not concerned with it by His providence, does not watch
every--as the saying goes--His eye is not on every sparrow. Whereas the theist
holds that God not only created the world but governs it from moment to moment
and that the divine providence is concerned with every aspect of the world in
which we live.
Then
there is the other issue between the theist and the pantheist. According to the
theist, God is in the world but also transcends it. He's in it by His power but
He's not identified with it. He transcends the world. There is God and the
world. Whereas according to the pantheist, the world and God are coextensive,
in a sense, God's whole being is in the world, the world is itself the body of
the Divine Being.
But
first, we must ask about God's nature before we ask about God's existence. We
must have some meaning for the term "God." We must use that word
"God" with some definite significance before there's any way we can
reasonably inquire whether the thing we are naming and signifying by the word
"God" actually exists. For certainly if what God is is unknown to us
and unknowable to us, then the word "God" can have no meaning and
there could be no sense to the question, "Does God exist?"
want you to note something here. It is
possible to give the word "God" very definite meaning in our minds
without begging the question whether God exists. No matter how we conceive God,
how definite our conception is, that still leaves quite open the question
whether the thing we are conceiving, the object of our conception really
actually exists outside our minds and independently of our thinking.
Now
when we ask the question, "What does the word 'God' mean," how do we
think of God? What is our conception of God? Three basic possibilities occur.
And I think that these three possibilities are quite exhaustive. First, it is
possible for us to think of God as totally, I emphasize the word
"totally", as totally unlike anything else we know, totally unlike
anything else we know. But if we think of God this way then we can have no
definite conception of God. For if God is totally unlike anything else we know,
we have no way of going to the things we know to our understanding of God. That
is, we can have no carry over. We can attach no meanings to any of our settled
meanings and understanding. Hence if we take this possibility, we eliminate any
further inquiry into the existence of God.
Now
we can go to the opposite extreme. We can go to the opposite extreme and think
of God as essentially like, as essentially like everything else we know. Most
of the things we know in the world, most of the things in our experience are
corporeal, finite, mutable, sensible, imperfect, changing in time. Now if we
say that God is essentially like all the things we know from our experience, we
must be saying of God that God too is finite and corporeal and mutable and
imperfect.
Now
what are the consequences of thinking of God this way? Well, if we think of God
this way, then first of all, God's existence should be as knowable to us as any
of the other things we know that are finite and corporeal and mutable and
physical and sensible. But clearly this is not the case. Everyone, everyone
understands no matter what else he knows or what else he thinks that God's
existence is not as known to us or as knowable to us as all the things in the
world that are experienced. Moreover, moreover this attribution to God of
finiteness and corporeality and mutability, these characteristics that are
common with all the things of our experience violates, I think, anyone's sense
of the notion of divinity. And it certainly violates the conception of divinity
that is to be found in any of the western religions.
Now
there is a third possibility, a middle ground between these extremes. I started
out you know by saying at one extreme one could take the position that God is
totally unlike any of the things in our experience. At the other extreme you
could take the position that God is essentially like.
Now
then the middle ground would be to say that God is both like and unlike, both
like and unlike the things we know, the things of our ordinary, everyday
experience.
Now
when you say this you've got to ask two further questions. How is God unlike
the things in our experience and how is God like the things of our experience? The
answers are God is unlike the things of our experience, the things we know in
our daily experience in those respects in which we recognize them to be the
very opposite of divine. That is, the things we must say negatively of God are
these: we must say that God is not finite as the things of our experience are,
that God is not corporeal as the things of our experience are, that God is not
mutable as the things of our experience are, that God is not imperfect as the
things of our experience are. In other words, all of these negative
attributions must be made if this is the way in which we must understand God as
being unlike the things of our experience.
How
then is God like the things of our experience? Here we must say that God is
like them only in that respect which must be common to whatever is, which must
be common to whatever is. Now whatever is, has being. And therefore we must say
of God if we're going to say that God is like the things of our experience in
any respect, that God at least has being and whatever properties belong to a
thing in so far as it has being, only in this respect are we entitled to say
that God is like the things of our experience.
Now
this leads us, I think, to a profound understanding of how we must conceive
God. For perfectly as the purpose appears if not to all of us that we must not
only conceive God as a being, I don't mean an existent one yet because all I've
talked about is a being, possible being or an actual being, either way; if we
conceive God as a being, we are only conceiving God if we conceive of God as a
supreme being. And when we say that we conceive of God as a supreme being or as
the Supreme Being, some things follow almost at once from this.
A
very famous argument arises at this point called the ontological argument of
Saint Anselm. Let me state it for you. Saint Anselm asks us to start thinking
about God as a Supreme Being. And when we think of God as a Supreme Being,
Saint Anselm says what we are doing is thinking of that than which nothing
greater can be conceived. Because certainly if we really are conceiving a
Supreme Being, we must be conceiving a being than which nothing greater can be
conceived. Because if something greater can be conceived then it is not a
Supreme Being we are conceiving. Hence if we conceive of a Supreme Being, we
must be conceiving of that than which nothing greater can be conceived. Is that
clear? All right now.
Then
there are two alternatives. As we conceive of this supreme being as that than
which nothing greater can be conceived, either we conceive it as not existing
or conceive it as existing. Let's take the first alternative. If we conceive it
as not existing, then it is not that than which nothing greater can be
conceived because we could conceive of another being who had all the attributes
of this one and also existence. And if it has this additional attribute of
existence, this additional perfection, it is a greater than this one. Hence in
order to really conceive a being truly supreme, a being which is that than
which nothing greater could be conceived, we must conceive that being as
existing. In other words, it is necessary to conceive God as an existing being.
Notice
now I did not say this proves God's existence. Far from it. It only shows us
how we must conceive God. It is not possible to conceive God in an accurate
sense and conceive God as not existing. If we conceive God as a Supreme Being,
a being that than which nothing greater can be conceived, we must conceive God
as an existing being. This does not prove that the being we have thus conceived
exists. That is the question we must come back to now.
As
we do so, let me remind you of the alternatives on this fundamental question.
There is the alternative of the position taken by the atheist who says that
from the very nature of things we can see that God, conceived as a supreme and
perfect being, does not exist. The atheist usually argues from the existence of
evil in the world and tries to infer, tries to reason that the existence of the
evil in the world about us tends to show or prove that a perfect or benevolent
God, a good God does not exist. I want to call your attention to the fact that
the atheist never shows or tries to show that a Supreme Being cannot exist. He
never tries to show that it's impossible for a Supreme Being conceived as a
necessary being to exist.
Then
there is the position of the agnostic who says that from the very nature of God
as conceived, in the manner in which I've suggested He be conceived, we cannot
possibly know whether God does exist or not. But the very nature of God being
transcendent, infinite, beyond our range of apprehension is such a being that
even as we conceive it we could tell that we couldn't know whether it's a being
that exists or not.
And
finally the third alternative is a position of the philosophical theist, the
person who says that looking both at the nature of things and at the nature of
God it is possible to infer from the nature of things that a God thus conceived
as having the nature of a necessary being does exist.
Now
how is such an inference made? How do men reason in this way? I would like to
try to show you that now. And I'm going to try to show it to you by explaining
an argument or expounding an argument which runs, to put it to you very quickly
and briefly in the following manner, that we can infer that a necessary being
exists because the existence of a necessary being is required as the cause of
the existence of the finite, corporeal, mutable beings we know all around us to
exist.
Now
in order to state this argument clearly for you, you have to bear in mind the
distinction between two fundamental terms in the argument. The first is the
meaning of the term "necessary being." And I'm going to use a circle
as the symbol of a necessary being. Now what we mean by a necessary being is a
being which cannot not exist. A being of which it is impossible for it not to
exist. A being whose very nature is to exist so that its existence follows
immediately from its nature. As opposed to a necessary being, I'm going to use the
phrase "contingent being." The very opposite of a necessary being in
the following sense, a contingent being is a being which may or may not exist.
There is nothing about it which requires that it exist. Sometimes it does
exist; sometimes it does not exist. It comes to be and passes away.
You
and I, for example, are quite aware that we are contingent beings not necessary
beings. We're aware that we are on the edge of nothingness. In fact, only by
holding onto our existence that we don't fall away into nothingness. And that
sense of being surrounded by nothingness, of coming from nothingness, going
back into nothingness is our sense of our own contingent being. In other words,
that we may or may not exist. Our natures do not require us to exist. Existence
doesn't follow immediately from what we are. And all the things around us are
like this. And I'm going to use this symbol; this little opened square as the
symbol of a contingent being.
Now
when you understand this distinction in necessary and contingent beings, you
see one thing at once, that a contingent being needs a cause of its existence
at every moment of its existence. For if its existence does not follow from
what it is, if its existence does not follow from its nature, then something
else outside its nature must cause its existence. And so I'm going to use this
arrow drawn as to have the arrow point right into the being itself, into the
square, as a sign of the cause of the existence of the contingent being. In
contrast, the necessary being is one which does not need a cause of its
existence. For what we mean by a necessary being, let me say again, is one, the
very nature of which it is to exist. Whereas a contingent being is not one, the
very nature of which it is to exist and so needs a cause of its being, a cause
of its existence.
Now
that phrase, "cause of existence" is a very important phrase to
distinguish in meaning from the phrase, "cause of the becoming of
something." Would you think normally that the parents of a child are the
cause of that child's existence? Normally you would. You'd say, "Yes, they
cause the child to exist." No. They don't cause the child to exist; they
caused the child to come into existence. And the moment after, the very moment
after the child comes into existence, both parents can die and the child goes
on existing. That kind of cause I call--let me diagram it this way--it doesn't
go into the very being of the thing. It's external. It is a cause of the
changing of something. It is the cause of the coming to be or the passing away
of something. A cause of existence must continue to cause existence as long as
the thing exists. And so, parents are not the cause of the child's existence
since the child continues to exist long after the parents do not exist and they
cease to operate as causes.
Now
I want you to notice this now. That a contingent being is one which requires
the cause of its existence to cause its existence at every moment of its
existence. Now with these distinctions let me name three propositions for you
about these two kinds of beings. The first proposition is that contingent
beings do exist. You and I are contingent beings. We may or may not exist. We
come into being and pass away. We exist, chairs, tables, trees, cats and dogs,
all of these are contingent beings. They exist. So the proposition contingent
beings exist is true, is it not?
And
the second proposition is from the very understanding of how contingent being
that every contingent being needs a cause of its existence every moment of its
existence.
And
the third proposition is that no contingent being can cause the existence of
another. I didn't say that a contingent being, a parent, for example, could not
cause the coming to be of a child. I only said that a parent, which is a
contingent being, doesn't cause the existence of a child. That parent, so long
as the parent exists, also needs a cause of its existence. I'm only saying here
now that no other contingent being can cause the existence of any other
contingent being.
Now
one more proposition. And that proposition is that whenever the effect exists,
the cause required for the existence of the effect must also exist. Now with
those propositions I can state the reasoning to show that God exists. The
reasoning runs as follows. In fact, you already have it in mind. All I'm going
to do now is put it in good order. Here are the propositions. First, if the
existence of an effect, listen to the ifs, if the existence of an effect
implies the existence of its required cause; second, and if contingent things
exist; and third, and if everything contingent, if everything contingent must
have a cause of its existence at every moment of its existence; and fourth, if
no contingent thing can cause the existence of another contingent thing, you
can't put a contingent thing here as the cause of existence of this but only
can put a contingent thing as the cause of the becoming or change of a
contingent thing. Then if these things are true then it follows that a
necessary being exists as the cause of the existence of each contingent thing
at every moment of its existence.
Let
me repeat the argument again for you now. If the existence of an effect implies
the existence of its required cause and if contingent things exist and if
everything contingent must be caused to exist and if no contingent thing can
ever cause the existence of another contingent thing, then it follows that a
necessary being exists as the cause of the existence of the contingent things
known by us to exist.
Does
this argument which I've just been expounding to you by means of these diagrams
prove the existence of God conceived as the Supreme Being and therefore as a
necessary being? Let me say it once that it would prove the existence of God if
all the premises in the chain of reasoning could be known by us or asserted by
us as true. If all those ifs that I stated in that chain of the argument could
be asserted as really true, then I think the person who asserted them as true
would be entitled to say he knew God's existence as the conclusion of a
rational process of proof or inference.
Now
philosophers and theologians differ about this. Some philosophers and
theologians think that we can assert all these premises as true and therefore
that we can know by our reasoning that God exists. Other philosophers and
theologians doubt, very seriously doubt that we can assert the truth of these
premises and therefore they think that we are in grave doubt, as far as our own
natural knowledge goes, about God's existence.
Now
my own view here is neither the one nor the other of these two extremes. I
think of the four premises or propositions that constitute the body of the
argument, I am clear and certain about two of them. I am clear that contingent
things, things like you and me or trees and stone, that such things exist. I am
also clear that if the effect exists, the cause required for its existence must
exist. These two things I'm clear about. But when I come to the proposition
that contingent things need a cause of their existence, I have some difficulty
understanding that because I'm not sure I know the difference, really
understand the difference between cause of existence and cause of becoming. And
the most difficult proposition of all for me to understand is the proposition
that contingent things cannot cause the existence of anything, they can only
cause the motion or change or becoming of things but not the existence of
anything.
Now
I think that some people are better able to understand these matters than I am.
And for people who can understand them better than I, think it is fair to say
that they in their understanding really understand and know the truth about
God's existence. I would go so far as to say that even for persons like myself
with a weaker understanding of the truth of these propositions, I have some
rational grounds for a certain that God exists even though I have to make a
leap, a leap beyond those rational grounds to a belief. My reason carries me
just so far being weak. My understanding doesn't carry me the whole way yet. My
understanding and reason carry me far enough so that I'm entitled as a rational
man, as a reasonable man am entitled to make a leap beyond reason to the belief
that God exists. And when I make this leap, I think I make it not to a belief
in the God of the philosophers but I think the God I believe to exist is the
God that is worshipped by the religions of the West. As Pascal says and other
philosophers, "The God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob."
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This
is a transcription from the original television series (1953-54)
Copyright 1997 by the Center for the Study of The Great Ideas