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Essentials of Philosophy and Christian Thought - Lesson 2

Naturalism

A discussion of naturalism, what it teaches, two major exponents of naturalism (Lamont, Russell), and why it is wrong

Ronald Nash
Essentials of Philosophy and Christian Thought
Lesson 2
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Naturalism

Naturalism

 

I. Humanistic Naturialsm

 

II. What Naturalism Believes

A. Only naturalism exists

B. Nature is a materialistic system

C. Nature is self explanatory

D. Nature characterized by total uniformity

E. Nature is a deterministic system

 

III. Two Exponents of Naturalism

A. Corlis Lamont

B. Bertram Russell

 

IV. The Case Against Naturalism


Lessons
About
Transcript
  • Dr. Nash covers the objectives to the lectures, reading material, and discusses the five major beliefs that make up a worldview

  • A discussion of naturalism, what it teaches, two major exponents of naturalism (Lamont, Russell), and why it is wrong

  • Theories opposed by Plato ("Hermman"), his significance, his three forms of dualism, and Plato's basic teaching on "forms"

  • Plato's doctrine of the immortality of the soul, his understanding of knowledge (argued against by Augustine and Plotinus), and a discussion of rationalism vs. empiricism

  • The contributions of Aristotle (the law of non-contradiction; the difference between essential and non-essential properties), Plotinus, and Aquinas

  • Open theism is the belief that God does not know the future; otherwise, we would not be free in our decisions. Nash discusses the teachings of God's omniscience and human free will, and the logical implications of this teaching.

A seminary-level version of this class is available in our Institute Program.

Dr. Ronald Nash
Essentials of Philosophy and Christian Thought
th220-02
Naturalism
Lesson Transcript

 


Now that we have been introduced to the notion of a worldview, or conceptual system, we are ready to apply that knowledge to six important worldviews from the ancient and metaphysical world. Those six worldviews are as follows: Plato, Aristotle, Plotinus, Augustine, and Aquinas, plus the anti-religious, the anti-theistic worldview of humanistic naturalism.

A naturalist believes that the physical universe is the sum total of all that is. There is ancient naturalism as it existed in the thinking of people like Democritus, or Epicurus, or Lucretius, and there is also contemporary naturalism. A naturalist believes that the physical universe is the sum total of all that is. In the famous words of Carl Sagan, who died in 1996, “The universe is all that is, or ever was, or ever will be.” In the naturalist view of things, whether we go back to the ancient world or look at contemporary naturalism, in the naturalist view of things, Christian supernaturalism is false by definition, as are miracles, and the existence of the Judeo-Christian God. Since the matter that makes up the universe is eternal for a naturalist like this, any belief in a divine creation of the universe is false by definition.

For a naturalist the universe is analogous to a sealed box. Everything that happens inside that box, the natural order, is caused by, or is explicable in terms of other things that exist within the box. For a naturalist, nothing—including God—exists outside of that box. And remember, that box is the cosmos, the universe, the physical universe. Therefore, nothing outside the box that we call nature can have any causal effect within the box. So, if you imagine a sealed box that constitutes the whole physical universe, all of the galaxies, the planet Earth, our solar system, the entire physical universe, and outside of that box there is nothing, nothing at all, you’ve got a fairly good picture of naturalism. It is important to notice that this box is closed and sealed tightly. Even if something perchance did exist outside of the box, it could not serve as the cause of any event that occurs within the box. Naturalists believe that everything that happens within nature, within the box, has its cause in something else that exists within the natural order.

A metaphysical naturalist, then, believes the following propositions: (1) only nature, only the physical universe exists; (2) nature is a materialist system; (3) nature is a self-explanatory system—anything that happens within the natural order, anything that happens within the box, must, at least in principle, be explainable in terms of other elements of the natural order. It is never necessary to seek the explanation for any event within the box in something other than the natural order. (4) Naturalists believe that nature is characterized by total uniformity. And finally they believe that nature is a deterministic system. Nature—determinism is the belief that every event is made physically necessary by one or more antecedent causes. Any persons in the grip of these naturalistic habits of mind could not be expected to believe in the existence of the personal, omnipotent God of Judaism and Christianity, or in miracles, angels, conscious existence after death, or any other essential feature of the historic Christian faith. For such persons—naturalists—evidence of putative miracles can never be possible, and can never be persuasive. Since such persons believe that miracles are impossible, it is impossible that there should ever be convincing evidence for a miracle, thus, no arguments on behalf of the miraculous can possibly succeed with a naturalist on the naturalist’s own terms. The only proper way to address the naturalist disbelief is to begin by challenging the elements of their naturalism.

One way for the listener to recognize important features of naturalism is to dwell in the mood and the atmosphere of the following quotations from two naturalistic philosophers of the 20th century: Corliss Lamont and Bertrand Russell. Corliss Lamont expresses clearly the naturalist need to reject all forms of supernaturalism. Here’s what he says: “Humanism,” which is, for Lamont, just another name for naturalism, “Humanism believes in naturalistic metaphysics or attitude toward the universe that considers all forms of the supernatural as myth, and that regards nature as the totality of being, and is a constantly changing system of matter and energy which exists independently of any mind or consciousness.” That’s the end of the quote. That’s from Lamont’s book The Philosophy of Humanism. Moreover, Lamont continues: “Humanism, drawing especially from the laws and facts of science”—notice the assumption here, that Christianity can get no support at all from science, that Christians really can’t behave or think in any way consistently with modern science, which is false, but to repeat the quote—“Humanism, drawing especially upon the laws and facts of science, believes that man is an evolutionary product of the nature of which he is part. That the human mind is indivisibly conjoined with the functioning of his brain and that is an inseparable unity of body and personality, he can have no conscious survival after death.”

Now, two quotations from Bertrand Russell also provide important confirmation of my account of contemporary naturalism. Listen to this first quote from Bertrand Russell’s book Mysticism and Logic. It’s kind of a long quote, but it is an interesting quote, and if you’re in the right mood it can be somewhat a comical or humorous quotation, although Russell did not mean it that way. “That man is the product of causes which have no prevision of the end they were achieving, that man’s origin, his growth, his hopes, his fears, his loves, and his beliefs are but the outcome of accidental collocations of atoms; that no fire, no heroism, no intensity of thought and feeling can preserve an individual beyond the grave; that all the labors of the ages, all the devotion, all the inspiration, all the noonday brightness of human genius are destined to extinction, and the vast death of the solar system, and that the whole temple of man’s achievement must inevitably be buried beneath the debris of a universe in ruins”—wow—“All these things, if not quite beyond dispute,” Russell says, “are yet so nearly certain that no philosophy which rejects them can hope to stand. Only within the scaffolding of these truths, only on the firm foundation of the unyielding despair can the soul’s habitation henceforth be safely built.” Wow. Now, it takes a while to digest what Russell says there, but you must ask yourself, does he really have anything to stand upon, does he really have a foundation for what he has just said? “Only within the scaffolding of these truths”—how can there be any truths in a universe like this?—“Only in the firm foundation”—what is the firm foundation of the unyielding despair?—“Can the soul’s habitation henceforth be safely built.”

Now Russell goes on, and in the second passage he’s even more gloomy. Listen to this: “Brief and powerless is man’s life; on him and all his race the slow, sure doom falls pitiless and dark. Blind to good and evil, reckless of destruction, omnipotent matter rolls on its relentless way.” Russell may be quite a poet here—I don’t know what omnipotent matter is. I’m not sure much of this means anything, but here we have omnipotent matter rolling on its relentless way, “For man condemned today to lose his dearest tomorrow, himself to pass through the gate of darkness, it remains only to cherish, ere yet the blow falls, the lofty thoughts that ennoble his little day.” Russell might well have added this sentence: “Have a good day.” Well, to Bertrand Russell’s credit, he was not reticent to reveal the practical outcome for life of the naturalistic worldview.

Now, what one must recognize is that worldviews like this are chosen. They’re chosen much as an act of religious faith, only it’s an act of religious faith in which there is no god. There is no scientific evidence that supports Bertrand Russell’s hopeless and pathetic worldview. This is a leap in the dark, this is his worldview, but you understand, surely, that one cannot reason with someone about religious belief until they are willing to at least consider the possibility that this kind of worldview is not true.

So, we are looking at naturalism. It exists today; it existed in the days of Plato. Is there a way of refuting or at least casting doubts upon naturalism? Yes, there is, and let me share that with you at this moment.

A careful analysis of naturalism reveals a problem so serious that it fails one of the major tests that a rational person should expect any worldview to pass. In order to see how this is so, it is necessary first to recognize that naturalism regards the universe as a self-contained and self-explanatory system. If you close you eyes, think of nothing except a sealed box, and inside that box is the whole universe that we know about—deterministic, godless, materialistic, physicalist—and outside there is nothing, there is no god, there are no standards of morality that are eternal and transcendent, there are no standards of human reason that are eternal and transcendent—it’s just a box…just a box. There is nothing outside the box that we call nature that can explain, or is necessary to explain, anything that is inside the box. Naturalism claims that every individual object or event can be explained in terms of something else within the natural order. This dogma is not an accident or a non-essential feature of the naturalistic position. All that is required for naturalism to be false is the discovery of one thing that cannot be explained in the naturalistic way. If even a naturalist must concede the existence of just one thing that is outside the sealed, closed box of the natural order, then naturalism is a self-defeating system.

The Christian thinker named C.S. Lewis recognized herein the logically self-defeating nature of naturalism. Unless human reasoning is valid, C.S. Lewis argued, no arguments by any mess of metaphysical naturalist directed against Christian theism or offered in support of naturalism can be sound. The human mind has the power to grasp contingent truths, that is, things that are the case though they may not have been the case—that’s a contingent truth. But the human mind also has the power to grasp necessary connections, that is, what must be the case. The latter power, the ability to grasp necessary connections, is the hallmark of human reasoning. What I am calling a necessary connection may be illustrated by the syllogism that is so familiar to us all. That syllogism goes like this: “All men are mortal. Socrates is a man. Therefore, Socrates is mortal.” Nearly anyone can see, even without special training in logic, that the conclusion “Socrates is mortal” must be true if the other two propositions are true. Naturalists must appeal to this kind of necessary, logical connection in their own arguments for their own position, naturalism, indeed, in their reasoning about everything. But can naturalists account for this essential element of the reasoning process that they utilize in their arguments for their own position? C.S. Lewis thought not, and for good reason.

As Lewis thought, naturalism discredits our processes of reasoning, or at least reduces their credit to such a humble level that it can no longer support naturalism itself. Why is that? Listen to C.S. Lewis: “That is true because no account of the universe, including that of naturalism, can be true unless that account leaves it possible for our thinking to be a real insight. A theory which explained everything else in the whole universe but which made it impossible to believe that our thinking was valid, would be utterly out of court. For that theory would itself have been reached by thinking, and if thinking is not valid that theory would, of course, be demolished. It would have destroyed it’s own credentials. It could be an argument which proved that no argument was sound, a proof that there are no such things as proofs, and this of course is nonsense.” What Lewis was saying, then, was this—the thrust of his argument against naturalism is this: By definition, metaphysical naturalism excludes the possible existence of anything beyond nature, but the process of reasoning requires something that exceeds the bounds of nature, namely, the laws of logical inference. Therefore, metaphysical naturalism, the naturalism of Corliss Lamont, the naturalism of Bertrand Russell, the naturalism of any atheist, of any humanist turns out to be logically self-defeating because the only way the naturalist can prove that naturalism is true is to presuppose the existence of laws of logic which naturalists are forced to deny. Naturalism is a logically hopeless and self-defeating position, and that is true of ancient naturalism and also of contemporary naturalism.

It is difficult to see how metaphysical naturalism can provide an adequate reason why human reasoning can ever be valid, or that our sense organs can be trusted. Why should we not conclude that naturalism is incompatible with attitudes of trust in either our rational or our sensible faculties? We could think that naturalism destroys our confidence in the validity of any reasoning, including the reasoning that may have led us to adopt naturalistic theories. Thus, the naturalistic theories are self-destructive, rather like the man who saws off the branch he is sitting on. The only cold comfort they—naturalists—hold out, is that some of our thought may happen to agree with reality. But on naturalistic grounds, we can never know that it does. And when we are honest about the probabilities, it appears to be enormously improbably that such agreement would ever occur.

So one of naturalism’s major problems, the reason why naturalism really should not appeal to any intelligent person in the ancient world or the contemporary world, one of naturalism’s major problems, then, is explaining how mindless forces give rise to minds, to knowledge, to sound reasoning, and moral principles that report how human beings ought to behave. Not surprisingly, naturalists want the rest of us to think that their worldview, naturalism, is a product of their sound reasoning. But, all things considered, it is hard to see why naturalism is not self-referentially absurd, logically self-defeating. Before any person can justify his or her acceptance of naturalism on rational grounds, it is first necessary for that person to reject a cardinal tenet of the naturalistic position. The only way a person can provide rational grounds for believing in naturalism is first to cease being a naturalist.