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Journal

2016 | 2 | 1 |

Article title

A De Jure Criticism of Theism

Authors

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
An evolutionary by-product explanation entails that religious belief is an unintended consequence of a cognitive process selected for by evolution. In this paper, I argue that if a by-product explanation is true, then religious belief is unwarranted (even if God exists). In particular, I argue that if the cause of religious belief is the god-faculty (HADD + ToM + eToM + MCI), then it is likely unreliable; thus, religious belief is unwarranted. Plantinga argues that de jure criticisms are not independent of de facto criticisms: without knowing whether or not God exists, one can’t say that belief in God is unwarranted, since if God exists, it is possible that God has planned that this mechanism would lead to belief in Him. Against Plantinga, I show that in order for de jure criticisms to have force, it is not necessary to know that God does not exist. Instead, one only needs to doubt His existence. And if by-product explanations turn out to be supported by the evidence, this fact alone gives us reason to doubt God’s existence. Thus, if the by-product explanation is true, belief in God is not warranted; if we know this, then we have reason to doubt theism.

Publisher

Journal

Year

Volume

2

Issue

1

Physical description

Dates

received
2015-08-30
accepted
2015-12-07
online
2016-02-22

Contributors

author
  • Metropolitan State University of Denver

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_1515_opth-2016-0003
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