Indonesian Translation: A Philosophical & Theological Response to the Problem of Evil

Dalam filsafat agama, natural atheology merupakan cabang filsafat yang mencoba membuktikan keyakinan teis (orang-orang yang percaya adanya Tuhan) adalah salah. Salah satu argumen utama dan terkuat natural atheology adalah problem of evil (masalah kejahatan).

Problem of evil menyatakan jika Tuhan Mahakuasa dan Mahabaik itu ada, tidak mungkin Dia mengizinkan begitu banyak kepedihan dan penderitaan terjadi di dunia. Filsuf masyhur David Hume dalam Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion mengatakan hal serupa,

'Pertanyaan kuno Epikurus (filsuf yunani) sampai sekarang belum terjawab. Apakah Dia mau mencegah kejahatan, tapi tidak mampu? Berarti Dia tidak Mahakuasa. Apakah Dia mampu, tetapi tidak mau? Berarti Dia jahat. Apakah Dia mampu dan mau? Lalu dari manakah itu kejahatan?'

Problem of evil tanpa diragukan lagi merupakan hambatan intelektual utama yang harus dijawab seorang muslim atau teis agar yakin (atau meyakinkan orang lain) bahwa Tuhan itu ada.

Ada dua versi problem of evil, internal dan eksternal. Problem of evil internal yaitu permasalahan yang premis dari argumennya yang merupakan pegangan muslim. Hal ini karena keimanan mereka terhadap Islam. Sedangkan problem of evil eksternal yaitu permasalahan yang premis dari argumennya tidak menjadi pegangan muslim namun cukup beralasan untuk percaya kebenarannya. (premis = apa yg dianggap benar sbg landasan kesimpulan kemudian).

Click here to read more of the Indonesian translation & click here for the original English version.

Note: Many thanks to Irfan Habibie for the translation.

God's Power & Will: Answers to Common Questions


During the Islamic Awareness Week tour, which is now coming to an end, I realised there were common questions raised throughout the lectures and presentations. As a result I felt it would be beneficial for the reader to have the answers to these questions available in short posts. The questions raised were varied and included issues pertaining to the existence of God, God’s nature, Islamic Law, and Islamic Theology. In this post I will attempt to answer two questions that frequently arise during the lectures related to God’s nature.

These questions are:

1. If God is all powerful can He do anything, including creating a stone He cannot move?
2. Can God have free will if He knows everything?

If God is all powerful can He do anything, including creating a stone He cannot move?

The Islamic theological position regarding God’s ability is eloquently summed up in the following creedal statement found in The Creed of Imam Al-Tahawi. It states,

“…He is Omnipotent. Everything is dependent on Him, and every affair is effortless for Him.”

A common contention or question regarding God’s power and ability is that if God is omnipotent then can He create a stone He cannot move? A key point to make in answering this question is to highlight that ‘Omnipotence’ is misconstrued as ‘all powerful’. What omnipotence really implies is the ability to actualise every affair, rather than raw power. So God being able to “create a stone He cannot move” actually describes an affair that is impossible and meaningless, just like if we were to say “a white black crow” or “a circle triangle” or even an “amphibian mammal”.

Such statements describe nothing at all and have no informative value, they are meaningless. So why should we even answer a question that has no meaning? To put it bluntly the question is not even a question.

Another way of looking at this is that since God is all powerful it means that He will always be able to do what He wills, as the creedal statement above mentions “…and every affair is effortless for Him.” Therefore omnipotence also includes the impossibility of failure. The questioner however is saying that since God is all powerful He can do anything which includes failure! This is irrational and absurd as it is equivalent to saying “an all powerful being cannot be an all powerful being”!

To conclude, God can create stone that is heavier than anything we can imagine, but He will always be able to move the stone, what must be understood is that failure is not an aspect of omnipotence.

Can God have free will if He knows everything?

In Islamic theology God is ‘All-Knowing’ and His will is always fulfilled. As a result people have questioned “Can God really have free will if He knows everything? Especially since that His knowledge includes things that He will do? And if He knows what He will do, doesn’t that make His actions dependent on His foreknowledge? Therefore He has no free will?”

The answer to this question is quite straight forward. The questioner has equated knowledge of the future with the cause of future events. For example if I know my daughter is going to wake up a 7:00 am tomorrow morning, and when the morning comes she does wake up at that time (usually having a good pull at my beard!), what caused her to wake up? It surely isn’t my knowledge of the fact that she will wake up at the time; rather it’s her biological ‘clock’ – not to forget that it is also due to the fact that she is hungry or wants to play! Similarly if I know I will lift 140 kilos bench press when I go to the gym tomorrow does that mean that my knowledge of being able to lift that amount made me do it? No, the fact is that my choice of going to the gym, including my physiological make up, has caused me to be able to lift that weight, and not the knowledge of the fact that I can.

So God’s foreknowledge of future events, including His own actions, doesn’t mean that His knowledge caused Him to act in a certain way. For example, the fact that He created the world and placed human beings as vicegerents on it doesn’t mean His foreknowledge of it forced him to do it. Also God’s foreknowledge of the fact that He will enter people in paradise doesn’t make Him do it, rather His mercy and love is the reason. This is eloquently summarised in The Creed of Imam Al-Tahawi,

“He guides, protects, and preserves whomever He wills by His grace. And He misguides, forsakes, and afflicts whomever He wills by justice…God has always known the total number of those who will enter paradise and those who will enter the fire. Nothing is added to or subtracted from that number.”

So His guidance will not manifest itself because He knows who would be guided, rather it is due to His grace, and God doesn’t contradict His nature. In summary foreknowledge doesn’t equal causality.

End Note

In the next posts more questions will be answered relating to varied topics. This doesn’t mean I have all the answers, I don’t. It just means that I have tried to follow the Qur’anic value of “If you don’t know ask those who know” and it is something I advise everyone to do. In Islam God is the source of all knowledge, so to ask is to learn and to learn is to free ourselves from ignorance, as the Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessing be upon him) said,

“The cure to ignorance is to ask and learn.” I pray we all proceed in that light, ameen.

Face the Faith: A New Radio Show on Islamic Thought & Philosophy


Face the Faith with Hamza Andreas Tzortzis!

Dealing with philosophical and exploratory questions about the Islamic faith, Hamza Andreas Tzortzis will provide insights into the core foundations of the Islamic faith, revealing the true beliefs of Islam - the true face of religion.

Listen Live Now - Click Here

The show airs Wednesdays at 2pm and 6pm (PST) - 10pm and 2am (repeated) UK time

See the Face the Faith page - Click Here

You can listen to past shows which include: A Journey Through the Qur'an, Why Does Evil Exist if God is Good?, Who Is God?

Next Show! The Dawkins Delusion

www.onelegacyradio.com

The Cambridge Union Debate: Professor Simon Blackburn, Causality and Design


When I was invited by the Cambridge University Islamic Society to participate in a debate at the Union Debating Chambers, I didn’t think that hard about accepting, because I knew they would provide a strong challenger thereby facilitating a good discussion. Once they confirmed that they had arranged my interlocutor to be Professor Simon Blackburn I jumped for joy because I recently found out that he was a huge fan of David Hume, after all he does advance neo-humean philosophy. You are probably wondering why the excitement, well it is because David Hume was not a self-proclaimed atheist like the hardliners Richard Dawkins and co. in contrast he was very subtle, much less militant, and more nuanced.

This leads nicely to introduce, more formally, Professor Simon Blackburn. But before I do, I would like to add that he was very polite, courteous, and he never made me feel out of place. Professor Blackburn is one of the leading academics in Britain; he is a Professor of Philosophy at Cambridge University and is the vice-chair of the British Humanist Association. He has written many books and he is the former editor of the journal Mind. In light of this and his other academic achievements I approached Professor Blackburn just before the debate and thanked him for agreeing to participate in the discussion. I told him that I would bring no surprises to the table as I would be presenting a contemporary form of the cosmological argument, the teleological argument and the inimitability of the Qur’an.

After I delivered my arguments within the allocated twenty minutes, the Professor decided to include his rebuttal time in his main presentation. As a result he brought to light various contentions to my arguments, his main contentions included:

1. Causality doesn’t make sense outside of time
2. ‘Who designed the designer?’ & the flawed analogy of design
3. The explanatory power of the designer is weak

Causality doesn’t make sense outside of time

The Professor exclaimed that to posit a cause outside of the universe, and therefore outside of time, doesn’t make sense. However I argued that God's act of creation can act as a simultaneous asymmetric type of cause, which is not temporally, but causally prior to the moment of creation. His act of creation is thus simultaneous with the creation of the universe. So the universe is an effect produced by a cause in time, in other words the act of creation enters time and causes the universe to come into existence at the same moment, and there are no good philosophical reasons why this can’t be true.

I ended my response by concluding that there is no Philosophical consensus on the definition of causality (not to mention time itself!). Therefore, in the absence of a consensus the most basic definition should be used, and this definition doesn’t include time as a necessary factor. The basic definition is “something which produces an effect”.

Who designed the designer & the flawed analogy of design

The Professor’s next contention was the fact that even if we can conclude there must have been a designer for the fine-tuning that is apparent in the universe, this doesn’t stop us from asking “who designed the designer?”, in other words there can be a meta-metaphysical designer, and a meta-meta-metaphysical designer and so on. He continued that the design argument is a weak argument as it is a flawed analogy of design, this is because you can’t make an analogy with something that is apparently immaterial and outside of the universe, unless of course you have deeply help anthropomorphic views – something considered blasphemous in the Islamic tradition.

I responded to this contention in two ways, firstly I agreed with the Professor that if the design argument was an analogy it would indeed be a weak. However I continued by saying that the argument is much more than an argument from analogy, it is an inference to the best explanation, as Elliott Sober writes in response to David Hume’s contentions, which have obviously been mirrored by Professor Blackburn:

“Hume did not think of the design argument [as an inference to the best explanation]. For him… it [was] an argument from analogy, or an inductive argument. This alternate conception of the argument makes a great deal of difference. Hume’s criticisms are quite powerful if the argument has the character he attributes to it. But if the argument is, as I maintain, an inference to the best explanation, Hume’s criticisms entirely lose their bite.”

Secondly I argued that in the Philosophy of science the best explanation doesn’t require an explanation. Anyone with a basic understanding of the philosophy of science will conclude that in the inference to the best explanation, the best explanation doesn’t require an explanation! I used an example similar to the one that follows to illustrate this point.

Imagine 500 years from now a group of futuristic archaeologists were to start digging in on the moon only to find parts of a car and a bus. They would be completely justified in inferring that these finds were products of an unknown civilisation. However if some Richard Dawkins IV were to argue that we can’t 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!

Additionally I concluded this response by saying that even if we were to apply this type of question to every attempt at explaining the explanation, we would end up with an infinite regress of explanations. And an infinite regress of explanations would defeat the whole purpose of science in the first place, which is to provide an explanation!

The explanatory power of the designer is weak

Another one of the Professor’s main contentions included that the designer for the whole universe must be more complex than the universe, therefore the explanatory power of the designer is weak, and in other words it fails as an explanation.

I responded by saying that the supernatural designer, in other words God, is one of the most simple concepts understood by all, something the once atheist now turned theist Professor Anthony Flew testifies too. I argued that just because God can do complex things doesn’t make him complex. The Professor, like Richard Dawkins in his book ‘The God Delusion’, confused ability with nature, just because God can do complex things, such as creating the universe, it doesn’t make His nature complex. I clarified this further during the question and answer session by adding that we humans can design things which are more complex then ourselves, computers being one of them.

To conclude this note, what I found particularly interesting is that once I responded to the Professor’s main contentions there was a shift in the debate. The Professor started to focus more on issues related to sociology and not philosophy! In other words he argued that he didn’t really care about the truth claims of religion as long as what they teach is useful and morally in tune with the humanistic values he upholds. This I believe was an interesting change of discussion and a typical strategic move often made by atheists who run out of philosophical arguments, not to mention that it obviously had nothing to do with the nature of the question. What I think Professor Blackburn did do successfully is refute my main initial assumption, which was that in thinking he was a Humean, he would facilitate a more nuanced discussion!

Rhetoric aside, I sincerely believe that the Professor made me think harder about God’s nature, and how it is virtually impossible (although there are somethings we can know) to know who this God is, in absence for revelation. The Professor made an interesting argument that echoes Hume’s stance on this issue, he highlighted that if this God is immaterial, transcendent, and unlike anything we can conceive then we can never know who this God is or what He intends for humanity. I agree, and the Qur’an reflects this reality as it mentions “You have no authority for this. How dare you say things about God without any knowledge?” It is like we know there is a knocking on door, we are not expecting anyone so we cannot speculate who is behind the door, the thing behind the door has to tell us. This is the most rational position to take, and this position takes us to another discussion: revelation and Prophethood. Maybe the next debate, inshAllah, God willing.

Stand for Justice, Stand for the Irvine 11

The bravery of these students is a motivation for all of us who want to stand against oppression and tyranny. On February 8th, Micheal Oren, a Zionist and representative of the Zionist state spoke at University California Irvine (UCI). During his speech Oren was interrupted by 11 protesters who had every right to speak out. Now they are charged with disrupting the peace and being targeted by hostile university administrators. They have a lawyer on their side but the UCI students might face suspension or expulsion. Please help by visiting http://www.irvine11.com/ and scroll down to follow the instructions to support the brothers.


The Dawkins Delusion: A Response to Richard Dawkins


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

The Big Debates & Islamic Awareness Tour 2010


Please join me on this tour of UK universities and communities. Lectures include the existence of God, responding to new atheism, demystifying and explaining Islam and much more. The seven big debates include topics related to religion, morality, Islam and God.
  1. "God: Delusion or Truth" - Northumbria University 26/01/2010, 6pm - 9pm. For more info please email su.islamicsociety@unn.ac.uk.
  2. Debate "Does God Exist?" - Sussex University 27/01/2010, 6pm. Arts A Leture Theatre. For more info please email smk28@sussex.ac.uk.
  3. Open Panel Discussion - University College London (UCL) 28/01/2010
  4. Debate "God - Delusion or Truth?" - QM University, London, 5pm 29/01/2010. Skeels Lecture Theatre.
  5. "Why I Converted to Islam?" - QM University, London Mile End 01/02/2010
  6. Debate "Does God Exist & Can We Live Good Lives Without Him?" - UCL 03/02/2010, 6:45pm - 8:45pm. Christopher Ingold Auditorium, Christopher Ingold Building. 20 Gordon Street, London WC1H 0AJ.
  7. "If God is Good why is there so much Evil in the World?" - Kings College 05/02/2010, 5:30pm. Waterloo Campus, B5.
  8. "Does God Exist?" - University of Essex 06/02/2010, 9am - 5pm. Ivor Crewe Hall, Wivenhoe Park, CO4 3SQ, Colchester.
  9. "Can We Live Better Lives Without Religion?" - QM University (Medics) 08/02/2010, 5:30pm. Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Milton LT, Garrod Building, Turner Street, Whitechapel, London E1 2AD.
  10. "Why Islam?" - Bristol University 09/02/2010, 6:15pm. Reception Room, Wills Memorial Building, Queens Road. BS8 1RJ.
  11. Debate "God: Delusion or Truth?" - Warwick University 10/02/2010 6:30pm, Room H0.52.
  12. "Can We Live Better Lives Without Religion?" - Lancaster University 11/02/2010, 6:30pm. Faraday Building, Cavendish LT.
  13. "The Qur'an, Language & History" - London School of Economics (LSE) 12/02/2010, 6:30pm. New Theatre.
  14. "Does God Exist?" - University of Sheffield 15/02/2010, 6:30pm. Arts Tower Lecture Theatre 6.
  15. Debate "Islamic Law: Barbaric or Misunderstood?" - Bradford University 17/02/2010, 1:45pm. Room H33, Richmond Building.
  16. "Does God Exist? The Muslim Reponse to Neo-Atheism" - Bath University 18/02/2010, 6:30pm - 8:30pm. Room 8W1.1
  17. Debate "The God Delusion?" - Cambridge University 19/02/2010, 6pm at the Cambridge Union Debate Chamber. With the highly aclaimed academic atheist Professor Simon Blackburn.
  18. "Why Islam?" - University of Kent 22/02/2010, 6pm. Grimond Lecture Theatre 2.
  19. "Does God Exist & Can We Live Better Lives Without Religion?" - University of Birmingham 23/02/2010, 4pm. Nuffield G17.
  20. "Who is God" - SOAS University 24/02/2010, 7pm. Khalili Lecture Theatre. London WC1H 0XG.
  21. "Does God Exist?" - St. Georges University 25/02/2010, 6:30pm - 8:30pm. Michael Heron Lecture Theatre.
  22. "Does God Exist?" - Loughborough University 01/03/2010, 6:30PM. James France Building, CC012.
  23. "Is Islam the Truth?" - Keele University 02/03/2010, 5:30pm. Westminster Theatre.
  24. "The Belief of a Muslim Explained" UCL 03/03/2010, 6pm. Chemistry Auditorium, Christopher Inglod Building.
  25. "Grill a Muslim: Q & A" - Cardiff University 04/03/2010, 6pm. Great Hall Students Union.
  26. Debate "Is God a Delusion?" - Kingston University 05/03/2010, 5:30pm - 7:45pm. Clattern Lecture Hall, Penrhyn Road, Surrey KT1 2EE. With Stephen Law, Senior Lecturer and Philosopher.
  27. "God: Reality or Fairytales?" - Wolverhampton University 08/03/2010, 12pm. The Zone - Students Union.
  28. "Can We Live Better Lives Without Religion?" - Aston University 10/03/2010, 1pm. Guildhall.
  29. "Why Islam?" - Southampton University 11/03/2010. Building 46 Room 3001, 7pm.
  30. "Is Islamic Law Barbaric?" - Leicester University 16/03/2010, 7pm. Rattray Lecture Theatre.
  31. "Darwin & Dawkins: The Prophets of Atheism Unveiled" - Plymouth University 17/03/2010, 5:45pm. Roland Levinsky Building Lecture Theatre 2.
Further details and more events to be confirmed.

Reflections on the Self


The Qur’an is a dynamic and intrusive text that constantly seeks to engage with the inner dispositions of man. The Qur’an achieves this by asking profound questions concerning natural phenomena, life and the universe. However the Qur’an does not stop at addressing these themes, it also asks about man himself. Who is he? Where is he going? What is he? It eloquently asks the question “Do they not reflect within themselves?”[1]

The above verse doesn’t only refer to the human body but refers to ourselves in general which includes physiological and psychological dimensions. We often contemplate and reflect on the universe outside of ourselves, but we seldom meditate on the micro-universe within ourselves. Although there is so much to write about concerning human physiology, the purpose of this note is to discuss one of the most important oversights of our thinking: the self.

Human beings experience things all the time, this note you are reading is an experience and even talking about your experience is an experience. However the ultimate reality that we know from any experience is the experiencer itself, 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, he writes, “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.”[2]

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 doesn’t discover the self; it’s 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 just 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 convince. The best-seller and popular atheist Richard Dawkins almost admits defeat concerning the self and consciousness, he states “We don’t know. We don’t understand it.”[3]

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.

[1] Qur’an 30:8
[2] There is a God: How the World’s Most Notorious Atheist changed his Mind. Anthony Flew with Roy Abraham Varghese. Appendix A, p 180.
[3] Richard Dawkins and Steeve Pinker, “Is Science Killing the Soul?” The Guardian-Dillons Debate, Edge 53. April 8, 1999.

My Next Event: "The Book That Shook The World" FOSIS Tour


"The Book That Shook The World"
The FOSIS Tour - December 2009

Hamza Andreas Tzortzis will give a lecture on:
1. What is the Qur'an?
2. The intellectual challenge of the Qur'an
3. The Philosophy of its Miralce
4. Linguistic appreciation of surah al-Kawthar
5. What Muslim & Non-Muslim Scholars say
6. The historical and political impact of the Qur'an
7. The Qur'an in the 21st Century
8. Lessons we can learn for today
9. Responding to some common objections

Wed 9th – Manchester
5 - 7pm, Roscoe Building, Manchester University

Thurs 10th – Dundee
6 - 7.30pm, Dalhousie Building, Dundee University

Fri 11th – Aberdeen
7 - 9pm, NK6 New Kings, Old Aberdeen Campus, Aberdeen University

For further information please contact Sister Nada services.gensec@fosis.org.uk

My Next Debate & Media Appearance: Debate Night on the Ummah Channel

Channel: Ummah Channel (Sky 828)
Programme: Debate Night
Date: 29th November 2009
Time: 8pm

Yesterday I particpated in a debate with a priest, an atheist and a humanist (it was recorded and will be shown on the date above). The topic was 'Can the world surive without religion?' During the programme various issues were discussed including the basis for morality, sociology of religion, politics and humanism.

Towards the end of debate one of the arguments I used was the moral argument, and to my astonishment the atheist was squeezed into a corner where, after I pointed out to him that the implications of his thinking was that killing 6 Million Jews in Nazi Germany was only subjectively wrong, he replied "Yes, its subjectively wrong".

My Next Event: Islam in the 21st Century

University of West England Islamic Society Presents:

Islam in the 21st Century

By Hamza Andreas Tzortzis

Date: Monday, November 30, 2009
Time: 6:00pm - 7:00pm

Location: University of the West of England,
Frenchay Campus, Coldharbour Lane,
Bristol, BS16 1QY

My Next Event: Proving the Existence of God


Brunel ISOC Presents:

Proving the Existence of God
With Hamza Andreas Tzortzis

Date: 2nd December 2009
Time: 5 - 7pm
Venue: Lecture Centre A

"There probably is no God" - Richard Dawkins, The God Delusion
"Religion poisons everything" - Christopher Hitchens, God is Not Great

An opportunity to learn about the philosophical and Qur'anic evidences for the existence of God, including an opportunity to ask questions and challenge the speaker.

Contact: info@brunelisoc.com

My Next Media Appearance: The Agenda on Press TV


Today I appeared on 'The Agenda' programme that is aired on Press TV presented by Yvonne Ridley. The topic was about soldiers and their right to be conscientious objectors in light of the recent Fort Hood shootings. Many other topics came up including foreign policy, religion and the role of the army. It was a lively discussion with many interesting views. The guests included Charlie Wolf (radio host and political commentator) and Symon Hill (associate director of the Ekklesia think tank). It will be shown on Friday 27th November 2009 at 7pm (GMT) on Sky Channel 515.

My Next Debate: DOES GOD EXIST? With Philosophy Lecturer & Author

The Muslim Society of Greenwich University
in association with www.thebigdebates.com presents:

The Big Debate: Does God Exist?
3rd December 2009, 6:15pm

Come and see these two dynamic speakers present their arguments:

Richard Baron

Richard read philosophy at the University of Cambridge and he now lectures on ancient Greek philosophy, the theory of knowledge and the philosophy of religion. He is an author on philosophy, his books include 'Projects and Values' and 'Deliberation and Reason'. Richard will be arguing that God does not exist. He runs the blog 'Analysis & Synthesis'.

Hamza Andreas Tzortzis

Hamza is an international public speaker on Islam. He has debated prominent academics and intellectuals. Hamza is one of the main initiators of the contemporary emergence of Muslim public debaters and speakers using western and islamic philosophy. Hamza will be presenting the Muslim argument on God's existence. He runs the popular blog hamzatzortzis.blogspot.com.

Queen Mary Room 180, Greenwich University, Old Royal Navy College, Park Row, Greenwich, London SE10 9LS

For non-greenwich students please register at isgodadelusion@googlemail.com
www.msgre.org

My Next Media Appearance: BBC Arabic


I was interviewed today by BBC Arabic for a documentary on Darwin, God & Religion. It should be shown in the middle of November on the website. Once I receive more details I will post them here.

The Big Debate Video: God - Delusion or Truth? With Editor of the Philosophy Now Magazine

My Next Event: My Journey to Islam

My Journey to Islam

By Hamza Andreas Tzortzis
Brother Hamza Andreas Tzortzis, a convert to Islam, is an international lecturer, public speaker, author, and intellectual activist. He is particularly interested in issues related to Islam, philosophy and politics. He has debated prominent academics and intellectuals.

Venue: The Quad (Youth Centre), Green Wrythe Lane, Carshalton, SM5 1JW

Date: 16:00 on Sunday 1st November 2009

Travel: Ample car parking spaces available, bus route 280

Contact: 07946489099

The God Debate with Rick Lewis & the Cosmological Argument

Around two weeks ago I participated in the “God: Delusion or Truth?” debate with the editor of the Philosophy Now magazine, Rick Lewis. Before I go into details about the event itself, I would like to say that Rick Lewis was a true gentleman; he was polite, sensitive and engaging. Without Rick, I do not think we would have had a successful event. The atmosphere was almost perfect, the auditorium was full with people sitting on the stairs, and it felt like a dialogue rather than a debate.

This is why I particularly enjoyed the event. No one seemed to be overly zealous or dogmatic in their approach to the discussion, I believe this was facilitated by the decision to omit the ‘rebuttals’ section after the initial presentations.

I approached the debate with a few objectives in mind, firstly I wanted to show that Muslims can have an intellectual and nuanced discussion on big questions such as the existence of God, secondly I wanted to use this debate as a milestone in attempting to change the current narrative on Muslim and non-Muslim discourse. What I mean by this is that I wanted to engage with Rick in a Quranic way, not a “I have the truth and I will win this debate!” kind of way. Many of the discussions between Muslims and non-Muslims, whether they are academics or apologists, tend to be couched in emotional language that usually creates a form of frustration and misunderstanding. In other words participating in a debate just to win the debate is not conducive to better understanding, rather if the Quranic injunction of “And debate with them in ways that are best” is to be taken seriously then I would argue that the focus should be on delivering the message clearly by trying to positively engage the opponent’s intellectual and emotional capacities. Otherwise ego’s will lead the discussion instead. Thirdly I wanted to show that Muslims can positively challenge the neo-Atheist narrative emanating from the likes of pseudo-intellectuals such as Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens.

Cosmological Argument

According to philosophical tradition the affirmative has to present first, so I started the debate by delivering a fifteen minute presentation on why I believe there are good reasons to be convinced that God exists. Due to time constraints I used two arguments, the cosmological argument, which was my main argument, and the teleological argument. I started to present the cosmological argument by saying that one of the greatest questions in Philosophy is, in the words of the British Philosopher Derek Parfit,“why there is anything rather than nothing?”[1]

The summary of the cosmological argument can be described as follows,

1. Whatever begins to exist has a cause
2. The universe began to exist
3. Therefore the universe has a cause

Explaining Premise 1

Premise 1 seems obviously true in contrast to its negation, as Philosopher William Craig nicely explains “it is rooted in the metaphysical intuition that something cannot come into being from nothing.”[2] To start claiming that things come into existence out of nothing is an irrational claim that contradicts our intuition and our human experience.

Explaining Premise 2

Some atheists such as Bertrand Russell argued that the universe had no beginning and will have no end. However if we think about this we will conclude that it is irrational. If the universe never had a beginning that means there must be an infinite history of past events. However does an actual infinite exist in the real world?

I argued that the concept of the infinite cannot be exported into the real world, because it leads to contradictions and it just doesn’t make sense, take the following examples as illustrations of this point:

1. Say you have an infinite number of bananas, if I take 2 away, how many do you have left? Infinity. Does that make sense?

2. Imagine you are a soldier ready to fire a gun, but before you shoot you have to ask permission for the soldier behind you, but he has to do the same, and it goes on for infinity. Will you ever shoot?

3. Take distance between two points, one may argue that you can subdivide the distance into infinite parts, but you will always be subdividing and never actually reach the “infinitieth” part! So in reality the infinite is potential and can never be actualised.

In light of this the ancient Greek Philosopher Aristotle said “the infinite is potential, never actual: the number of parts that can be taken always surpasses any assigned number.”[3] Significantly the famous German mathematician David Hilbert said “The infinite is nowhere to be found in reality. It neither exists in nature nor provides a legitimate basis for rational thought…the role that remains for the infinite to play is solely that of an idea.”[4]

So if we refer back to an infinite history of past events we can conclude, since events are not just ideas they are real, the number of past events cannot be infinite. Therefore the universe must be finite, in other words the cosmos had a beginning.

I continued to substantiate the claim the universe began to exist by expressing that this conclusion is confirmed by physics in what is popularly known as the ‘Big Bang’ theory. According to this theory physical time and space were created and matter and energy were also created. The four prominent scientists, J Richard, James E. Gunn, David N. Schramm and Beatrice M. Tinsley describe the event of the big bang as follows, “the universe began from a state of infinite density...Space and time were created in that event and so was all the matter in the universe.”[5]

However what does “infinite density” mean? Well, infinite density is precisely equivalent to ‘nothing’. This is why the Cambridge Astronomer Fred Hoyle states that the universe at a point in the past was “shrunk down to nothing at all”[6]. So the ‘Big Bang’ model requires us to believe that something was created out of nothing, as Anthony Kenny, a Professor at Oxford University, states “A proponent of the big bang theory, at least if he is an atheist, must believe that the…universe came out of nothing and by nothing”[7]

If we consult our metaphysical intuitions we will conclude “out of nothing, comes nothing!” Even atheists have recognised this, the Philosopher David Hume states “I never asserted to absurd proposition as that anything might arise without a cause”[8].

Explaining Premise 3

Since premises 1 and 2 are true, it logically follows that premise 3 is true. Everything that begins to exist has a cause, the universe began to exist, therefore the universe must also have a cause. However to believe that this cause is God is a leap of faith rather than a rational conclusion, because this cause could have been a mechanical cause or necessary pre-existing conditions. In light of this how can we justify that this cause is a trancedental personal being?

What is the nature of this cause?

Given that the universe has a cause and it created time and space, it must be,

1. Not subject to time because it created time as Stephen Hawking says “Almost everyone now believes that the universe, and time itself had a beginning at the Big Bang”[9].

2. Uncaused as we have discussed the absurdity of an infinite regress. If the cause of the universe had a cause, and that cause had a cause ad infinitum, then there wouldn't be a universe to talk about in the first place!

3. Immaterial and beyond matter because it created the universe, and the universe is the sum of all matter.

4. A personal agent because this cause is eternal, and it caused a finite effect, in other words the universe, then it must have chosen to do so. And choice indicates will and will indicates a personality. Another way to understand this is to familiarise with the kinds of immaterial realities that we know exist that cause effects in nature, the only type we can think of are minds like our own minds (just lift your leg to see what I mean). Since minds symbolise cognition and personality, then it follows that the immaterial cause is a personal agent.

God Exists!

The form of the cosmological argument I presented provided a positive case for the existence of God by arguing that a transcendental personal cause exists.

Responding to Rick Lewis’ Objections

After my presentation Rick placed his notes on to the lectern and presented an interesting case for why he believes there is no equivocal evidence for the existence of God. Rick agreed with premise 2 of the cosmological argument by stating that he didn’t have much to say about the absurdity of an actual infinite. However he did concentrate a lot on my second argument, the teleological argument. Even though I said that my main argument was the cosmological argument he tried to show that there can be another explanation for the fine tuning of the universe to permit life. Personally I didn’t find his alternative explanations plausible, as a lot of his claims where metaphysical claims that were counter intuitive and had no real basis, hence I responded by saying that they were not defeaters of the argument I presented.

Rick’s main objection was that premise 1 of the cosmological argument (whatever begins to exist has a cause) is not entirely true because causality only makes sense in time. The universe could not have a cause because the beginning of the universe is actually the beginning of time itself, so causality doesn’t apply.

My response to this objection was that premise 1, whatever begins to exist has a cause, is a metaphysical premise not a physical premise like the law of gravity. Also in the summary presentations at the end of the debate I stated that we have more reasons to believe that nothing comes from nothing rather than something from nothing, in other words being cannot come from non being, to claim otherwise is grasping at intellectual straws!

Conclusion

I haven’t mentioned much about the question and answer session, one reason for this is that it was very dynamic and included nearly all of the topics under the philosophy of religion! You can watch the video to find out more.

I would like to conclude that I learnt a lot from this debate. It taught me to be more attentive rather than dismissive, and it showed me that people of all backgrounds and persuasions can positively engage with and learn from one another. Just to show you that this is true I received an email with feedback from non-Muslims who were in the audience, and one of them said, “My next book to read is the Koran”.

Please attend my next debate with Philosopher, Lecturer, Author and Chair of the British Humanist Association’s Philosophers Group Peter Cave. See http://www.hamzatzortzis.com/ for the flyer and more information.

References

[1] Derek Parfit. Why Anything? Why This? London Review of Books, January 22, 1998.
[2] J.P. Moreland and William Lane Craig. Philosophical Foundations for a Christian Worldview. IVP Academic, p. 468-469
[3] Aristotle, Physics 207b8 (available online here http://classics.mit.edu/Aristotle/physics.html)
[4] David Hilbert. On the Infinite, in Philosophy of Mathematics, ed. with an Intro. by P. Benacerraf and H. Putnam. Prentice-Hall. 1964, p. 151.
[5] J. Richard Grott II, James E. Gunn, David N. Schramm, and Beatrice M. Tinsley. Will the Universe Expand Forever? Scientific American, March 1976, p. 65.
[6] Fred Hoyle. Astronomy and Cosmology. W. H. Freeman. 1975, p. 658.
[7] Anthony Kenny. The Five Ways: St. Thomas Aquinas' Proofs of God's Existence. Schocken Books. 1969, p. 66.
[8] David Hume to John Stewart. Feb. 1754, in Letters of David Hume. 2 Vols., ed J. Y. T. Greig. Clarendon Press. 1932, p. 187.
[9] Stephen Hawkin and Roger Penrose. The Nature of Space and Time. The Isaac Newton Institute Series of Lectures. Princeton University Press. 1996, p. 20.