The following is adapted from my new book What's So Great About Christianity. For more information about the book, see my website dineshdsouza.com.
Bestselling atheist tracts like Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion, Daniel Dennett's Breaking the Spell, and Christopher Hitchens' God Is Not Great portray religion as an unreasonable form of "blind faith," often leading to fanaticism and even violence. Some of these atheists call themselves "brights," implying that they are the smart people who base their opinions on reason and science and don't fall for silly superstitions. But for all their credentials and learning, the atheists have been duped by a fallacy. This may be called the Fallacy of the Enlightenment, and it was first pointed out by that great Enlightenment philosopher, Immanuel Kant.
The Fallacy of the Enlightenment is the glib assumption that human beings can continually find out more and more until eventually there is nothing more to discover. The Enlightenment Fallacy holds that human reason and science can, in principle, unmask the whole of reality. In his Critique of Pure Reason, Kant showed that this premise is false. In fact, he argued, that human knowledge is constrained not merely by how much reality is out there but also by the limited sensory apparatus of perception we bring to that reality.
Consider a tape recorder. Being the kind of instrument it is, a tape recorder can capture only one mode of reality: sound. Tape recorders can "hear" but they cannot see or touch or smell. Thus all aspects of reality that cannot be captured in sound are beyond the reach of a tape recorder. The same, Kant says, is true of human beings. The only way we apprehend reality is through our five senses. But why should we believe, Kant asked, that our five-mode instrument for apprehending reality is sufficient for capturing all of reality? What makes us think that there is no reality lies beyond our perception, reality that simply cannot be apprehended by our five senses?
Moreover, the reality we apprehend is merely our experience or "take" on reality. How can you know that your experience of things is in any way like the things-in-themselves? Normally you answer this question by considering the two things separately and then comparing them. I can tell if my daughter's drawing of her teacher looks like the teacher by placing the portrait and alongside the person. I compare the copy or portrait with the original.
Kant points out, however, that we can never compare our experience of reality to reality itself. All we have is the experience, and that's all we can ever have. We have only the copies, but we never have the originals. So we have no basis for presuming that the two are even comparable. When we equate experience and reality, we are making an unjustified leap.
It is essential to recognize that Kant isn't diminishing the importance of experience or what he called the phenomenal world. That world is very important, because it is the only one our senses and reason have access to. It is entirely rational for us to believe in this phenomenal world and to use science and reason to discover its operating principles. But Kant contended that science and reason apply to the world of phenomena, of things as they are experienced by us. Science and reason cannot penetrate what Kant termed the noumena: things as they are in themselves.
Some critics have understood Kant to be denying the existence of external reality or of arguing that all of reality is "in the mind." Kant emphatically rejects this. He insists that the noumenon obviously exists because it is what gives rise to phenomena. In other words, our experience is an experience of something. Perhaps the best way to understand this is to see Kant as positing two kinds of reality: the reality that we experience and reality itself. The important thing is not to establish which is more real, but to recognize that human reason operates only in the phenomenal domain of experience. We can know of the existence of the noumenal realm, but at this point reason has reached its limit.
In Kant's view, the limits of human reason cannot be erased by the passage of time or by further investigation and experimentation. Rather, they are intrinsic to the kind of beings that humans are, and to the kind of apparatus that we possess for perceiving reality. The implication of Kant's argument is that reality as a whole is, in principle, inaccessible to human beings. Put another way, there is a great deal that human beings simply will never know.
So powerful is Kant's argument here that his critics have been able to answer him only with derision. When I challenged Daniel Dennett to debunk Kant's argument, he posted an angry response on his website in which he said several people had already refuted Kant. But he didn't provide any refutations, and he didn't name any names. Basically Dennett was relying on the argumentum ad ignorantium-the argument that relies on the ignorance of the audience. In fact, there are no such refutations.
Although Kant's argument seems counterintuitive-in the way that some of the greatest ideas from Copernicus to Einstein are counterintuitive-no one who understands the central doctrines of the world's leading religions should have any difficulty grasping his main point. Kant's philosophical vision is entirely congruent with the teachings of Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, Judaism and Christianity.
It is a shared doctrine of those religions that the empirical world we humans inhabit is not the only world there is. Ours is a world of appearances only in which we see things in a limited and distorted way, "through a glass darkly," as the apostle Paul writes in his first letter to the Corinthians 13:12. Ours is a transient world that is dependent on a higher, timeless reality. That reality is of a completely different order from anything we know, it constitutes the only permanent reality there is, and it sustains our world and presents it to our senses. Christianity teaches that while reason can point to the existence of this higher domain, this is where reason stops: it cannot on its own investigate or comprehend that domain.
Thus when Christopher Hitchens and other atheists routinely dismiss religious claims on the grounds that "what can be asserted without evidence can also be dismissed without evidence," they are making what philosophers like to call a category mistake. We learn from Kant that within the domain of experience, human reason is sovereign, but it is in no way unreasonable to believe things on faith that simply cannot be adjudicated by reason.
When atheists summarily dismiss the immortality of the soul or the afterlife on the grounds that they have never found any empirical proofs for either, they are asking for experiential evidence in a domain which is entirely beyond the reach of experience. In this domain, Kant argues, the absence of evidence cannot be used as the evidence for absence.
Notice that Kant's argument is entirely secular: It does not employ any religious vocabulary, nor does it rely on any kind of faith. But in showing the limits of reason, Kant's philosophy "opens the door to faith," as the philosopher himself noted.
So the new atheists and self-styled "brights" can do their strutting, but Kant has exposed their ignorant boast that atheism operates on a higher intellectual plane than theism. Rather, as Kant showed, reason must know its limits in order to be truly reasonable. The atheist foolishly presumes that reason is in principle capable of figuring out all that there is, while the theist at least knows that there is a reality greater than, and beyond, that which our senses and our minds can ever apprehend.



Reader Comments ( Page 11 of 48)
151. So you admit that it is impossible for god to have not been created, ManofMettl. Good. So: where did god come from?
Knight_of_BAAWA at 11:29PM on Oct 19th 2007
152. If mass/energy can't be created or destroyed... then doesn't it meet every practical test for something that's been around forever? Why complicate it by postulating that it was created by something *else* that's been around forever?
Ray Ingles at 11:30PM on Oct 19th 2007
153. You know, Christopher Kidwell on #136, you just totally opened my mind. I mean, I had not like thought of it like that before. Like, wow. But if Jesus didnt like do it, like who did. Christopher Columbus? Like who has your name, like? Wooooow. Dude, enlighten me more. Its amaaazing.
Michelle at 11:34PM on Oct 19th 2007
154. @146 You did not create God...God existed before you did...Do you believe that you are responsible for your own creation?
ManOfMettl at 11:42PM on Oct 19th 2007
155. Truth wrote:
"Rationalists, atheists, etc. will always hate any concept they can't reduce to their method and level of understanding."
For the sake of argument, let's say that is true. That is, of course, completely irrelevant to whether I know that God exists.
"They are the Procrustians of truth and knowledge: if they can't understand it, they try to destroy it."
For the sake of argument, let's say that is true. That is, of course, completely irrelevant to whether I know that God exists.
Wes at 11:48PM on Oct 19th 2007
156. What created god, ManofMettl?
Knight_of_BAAWA at 11:56PM on Oct 19th 2007
157. @153 Who created you?
ManOfMettl at 12:06AM on Oct 20th 2007
158. Aaaaah 123,
The circular argument continues.
Michelle at 12:09AM on Oct 20th 2007
159. Oh, I meant 153.
Michelle at 12:10AM on Oct 20th 2007
160. """124. Atheists arent very bright because they dont believe in a power greater than themselves. They are "self involved" and unfortunately for them Jesus warned "those who deny me, will be denied by the Father"...to be in the dar(k)ness for eternity is enough for me to open my mind and my heart to the possibility of a creator that loves me and all that he created... better to seek and find than be lost forever.
LIAM at 7:54PM on Oct 19th 2007"""
Wow. It must be quite the event when you're able to move your bowels.
Lighten up, Liam.
I've heard your 'reasoning' used by many people. You're telling us that you believe in god because if you don't, he, she or it will hurl you into 'eternal darkness'. But in the very next phrase, you're telling us how much your god 'loves' you...
Are you serious? This is your argument for your choice in belief systems?
So, what you're saying is that you're easily threatened and submissive when it comes to verbal threats...To be more clear---Threats you read in books, not necessarily directed at you?
Please, tell me you don't hold a teaching position.
Heathereeee at 12:13AM on Oct 20th 2007
161. "99.99% of all the Scientists in the world believe
in Evolution" Was this in People magazine and I missed it?
John Gleason at 12:17AM on Oct 20th 2007
162. Dneshit go home. Untouchables are in vougue now back in yopur part of the planet. You are pitiful and your punditry is putrid.
People like you are why I am against immigration (legal or otherwise).You are a pathetic caricature of a decent human being. Pray I am not appointed head of ICE, you are out of here gunga din.
You and Malkin are being used, but we are still not letting your "cuzin's" in, no matter how much water you carry for the right wing.
J. at 12:20AM on Oct 20th 2007
163. Atheists are well aware of the limitations of our senses and our brains, but we maintain that, limited as these things are, they are all we have to work with in order to gain information and knowledge about reality.
Believers think that they have another source: revelation. And what does "revelation" amount to? It amounts to somebody (priests, "prophets", popes,apostles, etc) telling us that God has revealed to them things that he has not revealed to the rest of us and telling us to believe them on pain of eternal damnation. And in fear of such psychological threats, the craven bow down and believe.
I don't know if atheists are "brights", but I do know that religious believers are "gullibles".
emelpe at 2:30AM on Oct 22nd 2007
164. What created god, ManofMettl.
I'll just keep asking. You'll never be rid of that question.
Knight_of_BAAWA at 12:33AM on Oct 20th 2007
165. The argument here may not support atheism but it really doesn't support religion either. By the reasoning each individual religion is just a blind shot in the dark, one of many possible forms that objective reality could be. Jesus is just as creditable as the flying spaghetti monster. Good job sinking atheism, you torpedoed religion too, agnosticism come out on top though.
MattD at 1:03AM on Oct 20th 2007