How Theism Violates the Primacy of
Existence
Originally published in February 2010 on Incinerating Presuppositionalism, this blog entry serves as a companion piece to the previously published entry titled The Inherent Subjectivism of Theism. This piece is divided into the following sections, the last of which consists of comments submitted in response to the original blog entry as well as my responses to those comments:
The Issue of Metaphysical Primacy
Theism and Metaphysical Primacy
“Dude, Where’s the Violation?”
Introduction
Recognizing the antithesis between the primacy of
existence and the primacy of consciousness is a virtue for which only
Objectivism seems prepared to equip a person, while other philosophies tend to
ignore or evade the matter. Objectivism is the only philosophy that I know of
which not only identifies the primacy of existence explicitly as a fundamental
philosophical concern, but which also purposefully develops its metaphysics,
epistemology, morality and politics in a manner consistent with the primacy of
existence as an ultimate guiding principle.
Occasionally I am asked, by atheists and theists alike, why I would say that
theism violates the primacy of existence. That theism does in fact violate the
primacy of existence is so obvious to me that it is puzzling that anyone would
need to have it explained. But then I realize that, for many years now, I’ve
understood the issue of metaphysical primacy and its implications for theism
and every other position under the sun, and not everyone else benefits from
this understanding. It is this understanding that I wish to share with my
readers.
To understand why theism violates the primacy of existence, we must first
understand what is meant by the primacy of existence. And in order to
appreciate fully what the primacy of existence means, we must understand
the issue of metaphysical primacy.
The Issue of Metaphysical Primacy
The issue of metaphysical primacy has to do with the relationship between
consciousness and its objects. Since all philosophy involves consciousness
relating to objects (either real or imagined), the issue of metaphysical
primacy bears on all philosophical principles, viewpoints and initiatives.
Because consciousness is involved throughout the establishment and development
of philosophical principles, the relationship between consciousness and its
objects is not some sidebar distraction or marginal curiosity of trivial
interest. Ignoring the relationship between consciousness
is not an option for serious thinkers, especially once the question of the proper
orientation of this relationship has been raised.
Essentially, the issue of metaphysical primacy asks:
What holds metaphysical primacy in the
relationship between a consciousness and its objects: the subject of
consciousness, or the objects of consciousness?
For a moment, some may entertain the notion that
this question is fallaciously complex, perhaps supposing that it assumes a
false dichotomy. Why suppose that either the subject of consciousness or its
objects must hold metaphysical primacy? Can’t both be metaphysical equals?
Can’t both the subject of consciousness and its objects enjoy metaphysical
primacy, just as two individuals taking a test can both score 100% on it?
Such questions may imply that the subject of consciousness and its objects are
locked in some sort of contest, with one side vying against the other, and that
the issue of metaphysical primacy is an attempt to pick a winner among the two contestants
arbitrarily. Either that, or they simply ignore the
root of the matter that the issue of metaphysical primacy is getting at, namely
identifying the proper relationship between a subject and its
objects.
It is an undeniable fact that a subject is distinct from the objects of its
awareness: a subject and its objects are not one and the same – the two are
engaged in a relationship. Consciousness is consciousness of an
object. Also, a subject does not switch sides with the objects of its
awareness, as if they could trade places at will and reverse the natural
orientation between the one and the other. When you perceive a rock, a chair,
or the Golden Gate Bridge, you cannot suddenly become that rock or chair or
bridge and look back at yourself as a perceiver. Consciousness is consciousness
of an object(s), and the orientation between consciousness and its
object(s) is uni-directional, and
there’s no reversing this orientation. A person cannot transfer his
consciousness to his objects, such that he becomes the object of his
consciousness, and the subject of his consciousness is now what used to be its
object. The relationship between a subject and its objects is contextually
static.
Additionally, the relationship between a subject and its objects is not a
relationship of equals. The subject is distinct from its objects, and the
subject has certain abilities and capacities which its objects qua objects do
not have in the context of their relationship together, even if some of those
objects happen to be other conscious individuals (i.e., other persons). When
you perceive a mountain or pair of scissors, it is you as the subject
who is perceiving these objects. In the context of
this relationship, the subject attends to its objects.
Another option, chosen (albeit implicitly) by most philosophies, is to suppose
that the subject of consciousness holds metaphysical primacy over its
objects. This is known as the primacy of consciousness, or as the primacy
of the subject metaphysics, since it grants metaphysical primacy to the subject
of consciousness over its objects. This is the view that the objects of
consciousness conform to the subject of consciousness, that the subject
of consciousness holds the “upper hand” in its relationship with the objects of
its awareness. The primacy of consciousness entails that the objects of one’s
awareness depend in some way on the subject of awareness, either for
their very existence (e.g., the subject of consciousness creates them,
either from existing material or “ex nihilo”), for their identity (e.g., the
subject of consciousness makes its objects of its awareness what
they are), and/or for their capacity to act (e.g., the subject of
consciousness controls what its objects do or can do). An attempt to
apply the primacy of consciousness consistently would involve all three
aspects, holding that objects are created by an act of consciousness, that
their identities are assigned to them based on choices made by the creating
consciousness, and that the abilities or “potentialities” possessed by objects
are given to those objects by a ruling consciousness. (Sound familar?)
The final option (as if it were avertible) is the primacy
of existence. Where the primacy of consciousness holds that the subject
of consciousness calls all the shots with respect to the existence, identity
and/or causal potentiality of its objects, the primacy of existence is the
recognition that existence exists independent of consciousness, that the
objects of one’s consciousness are what they are independent of conscious
activity, that the task of consciousness is neither to create the objects of
its awareness, assign identities to them, nor dictate what they can or cannot
do, but to perceive and identify its objects. While the primacy
of consciousness holds that the objects conform to consciousness, the
primacy of existence is the recognition that objects do not conform to
consciousness. The primacy of existence is the recognition that the objects of
one’s awareness exist independent of one’s awareness of them, that the
things one perceives are what they are regardless of what he would prefer
or wish them to be.
I agree entirely with Porter when he states:
I think the primacy of existence is the
most important issue in philosophy. I think it’s the real axiom of Objectivism.
(Ayn Rand’s Theory of Knowledge, p.
198)
The difference between the primacy of existence
and the primacy of consciousness, is the difference
between objectivity and subjectivism. The primacy of existence is
the recognition that the objects of consciousness exist and are what
they are independent of the conscious activity by which the subject is
aware of them, and thus represents the objective orientation between a
subject and its objects. The primacy of consciousness is essentially a fantasy
which seeks to reverse the proper orientation between a subject and its
objects, attributing to the subject the power to conform its objects to
its intentions, either for their very existence (the subject “creates” its own
objects), for their natures (the subject “assigns” its objects their identity),
and/or for their activity (the subject “controls” what its objects do). This
represents the subjective orientation between a subject and its objects.
Theism and Metaphysical Primacy
One of my readers asked
the following:
I understand the primacy of existence as
objects of consciousness hold primacy over the subjects and the primacy of
consciousness affirming the opposite. But I do not see the problem in affirming
that existence exists, existence has metaphysical primacy and that God exists.
Where lies the violation in asserting that existence
exists and so does God?
Questions such as this suggest to me that the one
posing it either does not really grasp what the issue of metaphysical primacy
deals with, or that he is not integrating what the issue of metaphysical
primacy addresses with what theism entails.
Even though many theists do not explicitly identify consciousness as one of the
primary characteristics which they attribute to their god (many defenders of
theism gravitate to higher abstractions when speaking of their god, such as aseity, cotermineity of their
god’s being with its self-consciousness, immutability, infinity, unity, etc.),
it is clear from what they say about their god that they do in fact hold it to
be a conscious being. In fact, they typically tend to take the
assumption that their god is conscious completely for granted, for it is vital
to just about everything else they claim about their god. According to what
theists say, their god knows, sees, judges, gets angry, expresses joy, loves,
commands, plans, determines, experiences pleasure,
wishes, etc. All these actions are actions requiring consciousness. Indeed, it
would be quite unusual if a theist were to affirm a god which performs all
these actions but which is not at the same time conscious of anything.
Christian apologists of the Vantillian tradition
emphatically dismiss rival religions for not consistently embracing what they
call a “personal” deity, i.e., a deity which is self-aware. A non-conscious
deity would be what they call an “impersonal” being (cf. John Frame, Apologetics
to the Glory of God, p. 34f).
Since theism entails belief in a deity which is conscious, the question
raised by the issue of metaphysical primacy has us focus on the relationship
between the deity as a conscious subject, and any objects it is said to be
conscious of (either by perception or by some other means). When we consider
the orientation which theism attributes to the relationship between its god as
a conscious subject and any objects it is said to be conscious of, the question
becomes:
Does this relationship resemble the
primacy of existence, or the primacy of consciousness?
Simply stating that the deity in question
possesses consciousness, is not enough to answer this question. We need more information. We need to know
more about what theists say about their god. Statements like the following
indicate in no uncertain way the orientation which theists have in mind for
their god in its relationship as a subject of consciousness to any objects it
is supposedly aware of:
Christianity holds that God is the creator
of every fact... God’s thought is placed back of every fact. (Cornelius
Van Til, Christian Theistic-Evidences, p. 88;
quoted in Bahnsen, Van Til’s
Apologetic: Readings & Analysis, p. 378)
God wills, that is, creates the universe.
God wills, that is, by his providence controls the course of development of the
created universe and brings it to its climax. (Cornelius Van Til, “Apologetics,” 1959)
We now know that the world exists simply
because God wills it. (Cornelius Van Til, “The
Election of All Men in Christ,” The Great Debate Today, 1970)
Fact: God willed the universe into being.
Fact: He willed the universe into being by simply speaking it into existence
instantaneously. References: Psalm 33:6,9 Psalm 148:5
Hebrews 11:3 Thought: He did not have to speak in order to create, but He did.
God could have just thought the universe into being. Instead, He spoke it into
being. He used His word to create. (Lesson
6: The Seven Days of Creation: A Deeper Study of Gen. 1:1 to 2:3)
God is Creator of everything, this vast
universe. All was created by His Word. He spoke it into being. It is written:
(Genesis 1:3) And God said... and it was so. His Word is powerful... God's Word
spoke the universe into being. His Word is powerful beyond our comprehension.
(Terrell Smith, What
Do Christians Believe?)
All things came into being through the
will of God. It was God's pleasure that the universe and everything in it be
created. (Mike Scott, Can you explain
why God created the universe?)
God's will is the final and exclusively
determinative power of whatsoever comes to pass. The nature of any created
thing is what it is because of an act of determination in relation to it on the
part of God. (Jack Cottrell, Sovereignty and Free Will)
God is active in history by definition of who He is, He has created everything and is present with it,
controls it, and exercises authority over it to reveal Himself to the praise of
His glorious grace. Every fact, and therefore every fact
of history, is a fact created by Christ for Christ. (Chris Bolt, “Redemption in
Apologetics,” The Portable Presuppositionalist,
p. 180)
Every fact is what it is because God has
said it is what it is. (Ibid., p. 162)
Clearly, not only is the “God” characterized
by these and similar statements supposed to be a conscious
being (possessing a will, capable of thought, able to speak,
etc.), these descriptions unmistakably grant metaphysical primacy to the
consciousness of “God” over any objects it is said to be aware of. It “creates”
its objects by simply willing them into existence, its “thought” is
“placed back of every fact,” its intentions “control” everything it is
conscious of, etc.
"Dude, Where’s the Violation?"
I'll show you.
Since any claim about reality implicitly affirms the primacy of existence (the
recognition that existence exists independent of consciousness), any assertion
that a god exists performatively contradicts itself
by virtue of its implicit affirmation of the primacy of existence on the one
hand (as a precondition for intelligibly making any statement about reality)
and the primacy of consciousness on the other (as the fundamental orientation
entailed by theism in the subject-object relationship).
In response to the question “Where lies the violation in asserting that
existence exists and so does God?”, recall the the
point I made in my blog The
Axioms and the Primacy of Existence, namely that the axiom of existence
("existence exists") is "not the only axiom, that it is not a
recognition that remains isolated from other recognitions." To say
"existence exists" implies the axiom of consciousness, for one would
have to be conscious in order to say this. Affirming both the axiom of
existence and the axiom of consciousness in turn implicitly affirms the primacy
of existence: Existence exists independent of consciousness.
So in making the statement “existence exists and so does God,” one is in fact
declaring “existence exists independent of consciousness, and so does this
consciousness upon which existence depends,” which is a direct
self-contradiction. It affirms on the one hand, explicitly, that existence
exists independent of consciousness (of any consciousness), and on the
other – in the very same breath – it affirms the existence of a consciousness on
which existence depends. For as we saw in the quotes above, “God” is
characterized as a consciousness which creates all existence distinct
from itself by an act of will. Thus not only does this position affirm a
contradiction at the level of metaphysical primacy, it also leads to the
irresolvable problem
of divine lonesomeness.
Theists who resist this criticism can test it for themselves. Let them ask
themselves the following question:
When you affirm that your god
exists, are you presupposing that your god exists independent
of your own consciousness? Or, are you saying that your god
exists only as a feature of your own psychology, as a figment of your
imagination, that the existence of “God” ultimately
depends on your own consciousness?
Typically theists can be expected to affirm the
former of the two: that their god is an independently existing being, that its
existence does not depend on the theist’s or any other “creature’s” awareness,
knowledge, feelings, imagination, that it has its own will and makes its own
choices, etc. In this way, theists are making use of the primacy of existence
in the very affirmation of their god’s existence: they are attempting to make a
statement about reality which supposedly obtains independent of their own
conscious activity. Thus they implicitly assume the primacy of existence by
simply affirming the alleged truth of their god-belief.
But what is it that they are affirming? They are affirming the existence
of a consciousness upon which existence depends. In other words, in the very
content of the god-belief claims which they assert, they are affirming the
primacy of consciousness – the very opposite of the primacy of existence, a
principle which they need in order to make their god-belief claims sensible by
any measure.
In this way, theists are directly contradicting themselves whenever they affirm
their god’s existence. They implicitly affirm the primacy of existence in the
very act of asserting their god-belief claims, and they expressly affirm the
primacy of consciousness in the very content of their god-belief claims.
In an exchange between myself and presuppositionalist
Chris Bolt (see the comments section of my blog Can
the Water in My Drinking Glass Turn into Merlot?), I had asked him if he
disputes the truth of the Objectivist axioms, which I listed specifically for
him to see.
In contemplating the axiom of existence, Bolt stated:
Do I believe that something exists? Yes,
God exists, for example.
When I wrote in my blog Chris
Bolt on Hume and Induction in response to Bolt’s statement, pointing out
that
just by saying ‘God exists,’ Bolt performatively contradicts himself. He makes use of the
primacy of existence while affirming a claim which denies the primacy of existence.
Bolt responded in a comment accusing me of
“begging the question with respect to the truth of the Objectivist worldview.”
But Bolt is mistaken here. As I explained, I am simply being consistent
with the Objectivist worldview, noting that “the only alternative to Objectivism, is some sort of subjectivism.” I cited presuppositionalism’s own champion, Greg Bahnsen, to help him understand. Bahnsen
states:
”Circularity” in one’s
philosophical system is just another name for “consistency” in outlook throughout
one’s system. That is,
one’s starting point and final conclusion cohere with each other. (Van Til’s Apologetic: Readings &
Analysis, p. 170n.42)
I do not expect that Bolt would disagree
here, and in his comments, he expressed no disagreement with this so far as I
could see. Certainly I don’t think he would think that I should be inconsistent
with my position. Indeed, if I had stated that Bolt was not performatively contradicting himself when he says “God
exists,” he could then legitimately accuse me of being inconsistent with my
worldview’s fundamentals. But in stating this recognition, I am in no way
“begging the question,” as should be clear from the points which I
have presented above.
Bolt did give a reason why he thinks I am wrong to point out the
self-contradiction in the claim “God exists.” Indeed, he stated that my
objection
takes the ‘primacy of existence’ and attempts
to apply it to a foreign worldview.
But this, too, is mistaken. Bolt seeks to evade my
critique of theism from the primacy of existence by arguing that the concept of
the primacy of existence is “foreign” to Christianity. While it is true that
the primacy of existence is “foreign” to Christian thought (indeed, this is a
significant admission on Bolt's part), this fact by itself does nothing to
diminish the pertinence of my critique. Even Bolt must realize that
consciousness is real and that there is a relationship between consciousness
and its objects, regardless of the specifics of one’s particular belief system.
A belief system is something one holds in his consciousness. So just by
acknowledging that one has a belief system, he is admitting to the fact that he
possesses the faculty of consciousness.
As we saw above, the issue of metaphysical primacy seeks to identify the proper
orientation between the subject of consciousness and its objects. Unless Bolt
denies the reality of consciousness, he must surely recognize that there is a
relationship between consciousness and its objects, since consciousness is
consciousness of some thing, whether he
believes in a god or not. Belief in the Christian god – since it requires
consciousness (belief being an activity performed by consciousness) – does not
exempt one’s consciousness from its need for an object, nor does it provide an
escape from the fact that consciousness implies a relationship between itself
and its objects.
So the “you’re arguing from a foreign worldview” objection fails, since there
is no such thing as a consciousness without anything to be conscious of. As Ayn Rand pointed out:
a consciousness with nothing to be
conscious of is a contradiction in terms. (Atlas Shrugged, Galt’s
Speech)
Unless Mr. Bolt wants to embrace a contradiction
in terms, he must acknowledge that consciousness naturally has an object. And
if he acknowledges that consciousness has an object, then
he must acknowledge that there is a relationship between consciousness and its
object – that consciousness is consciousness of an object. And if he
acknowledges this, he must acknowledge that there is a proper orientation
between consciousness and its objects, that since consciousness is
consciousness of an object, the object of consciousness holds
metaphysical primacy over consciousness: it is what it is independent of
conscious activity. A rock is what it is independent of one’s knowledge of
it; an event occurred even if someone does not know about it; a person is who
he is regardless of how others judge him. Even a Christian would say that his
god exists even if no one believes in it, wouldn’t he?
That’s the primacy of existence. By supposing that something exists and is what
it is even if people don’t believe it, an individual is informing his
supposition with the primacy of existence.
There is no escape from this, because there is no escape in
human cognition from the facts that consciousness is consciousness of an
object and that there is a relationship between consciousness and its objects.
The “foreign worldview” retort is a dodge that simply does not and cannot
succeed. To invoke it is to assume the truth of the primacy of existence: it is
an attempt to identify the state of affairs as they are supposed to exist
independent of anyone’s wishing, emotions, protestations, errors in judgment,
evasions, etc. The retort itself makes use of the very principle it is trying
to dismiss.
Bolt also stated:
Perhaps more importantly, there is no
explanation here of how affirming that God exists denies the primacy of
existence.
Apparently Bolt had not availed himself to any of
the items in the reading list which I provide below (all of which had been
written and posted either to my
blog or to my website well
before he made his comment). He also now has the points which I made above to
help him understand.
The
Primacy of Existence: A Validation
The
Axioms and the Primacy of Existence
Theism
and Subjective Metaphysics
The
Inherent Subjectivism of God-Belief
A
Reply to Tenant on Theistic Foundationalism vs. the
Objectivist Axioms
Dodging
the Subject-Object Relationship
Confessions
of a Vantillian Subjectivist
Bahnsen
on “Knowing the Supernatural”
The Cartoon
Universe of Christianity
The
Argument from Metaphysical Primacy: A Debate
In the comments section to this post, there were 26 responses submitted, eight of which were submitted by Chris Bolt, the individual to whom the blog entry was originally addressed.
26 Comments:
C.L. Bolt
said...
You saved me some work! It is a bit late. After I
read it again I will have some questions for further clarity. I am not sure
when I will get back to read it again though.
Robert Bumbalough said...
Hello Mr Bethrick; I hope you and your's
are well and prospering.
As I read through your latest piece, I will post my comments.
You wrote: Consciousness is consciousness of an object(s)...
Those who oppose Objectivism will predicate that any A=A statement is a
tautology and thus unnecessary because it is obvious. However, Peikoff pointed out that all true statements are of the
form X is some or all aspects of what it is, or X is X. Thus all true
statements are tautologies. They are evident because the subject of thought,
i.e.: the consciousness, perceives the X, i.e.: the object of thought. The
objection that A=A tautologies, or consciousness is consciousness, are
unnecessary is an evasion and a red herring, and instead of rebutting the
Objectivist case such contentions actually support metaphysical primacy of
existence because to be obvious, something must be perceived. To be perceived,
there must be a dichotomy between that which does the perceiving, the subject
of thought, and that which is perceived, the object of thought.
More later.
Best Wishes for your continued success
Bahnsen
Burner said...
Hi Robert,
It's good to hear from you again, thanks for your comments.
Yes, you're right - many have sought to dismiss the axioms because of their
tautological nature. And you're also right to point out what Peikoff notes: that all truths are in fact tautological. I
would say that tautologies *whose reference is to reality* are necessarily
true, because they make a statement of identity. If tautologies are
"unnecessary" because they state things that are "obvious,"
then we can do away with things like "2+2=4" and "(19+51)-(8*2)= 54" and "A squared plus B squared equals C
squared." These are all tautologies known as "equations." If a
philosopher thinks these are "unnecessary" and "obvious"
and should be abandoned, let him make his *feelings* known. Many
"philosophers" are self-eliminating in this manner.
Besides, why is it wrong to point out the obvious, especially when so many
philosophies have sought to evade the obvious?
I would not say, however, that "to be perceived, there must be a
*dichotomy* between that which does the perceiving... and that which is
perceived," but rather that there is a *relationship* between the subject
and the object. The issue of metaphysical primacy recognizes that there is a
relationship here, one that is fundamental to all cognition (and therefore to
all philosophical inquiry), and the primacy of existence identifies the proper
orientation in that relationship.
Regards,
Dawson
Bahnsen
Burner said...
Hi Chris,
Thanks for surfing on. As you contemplate what I have written, the primary
questions I'd ask you to consider are the following:
When you affirm that your god exists, are you presupposing that your god
exists independent of your own consciousness? Or, are you saying that your god
exists only as a feature of your own psychology, as a figment of your imagination, that the existence of “God” ultimately depends
on your own consciousness?
Your thoughts?
Regards,
Dawson
Robert Bumbalough said...
Further to my previous comment:
Mr Bethrick wrote regarding
Mr. Bolt: Even Bolt must realize that consciousness is real and that there
is a relationship between consciousness and its objects,... .
The Objectivist Axiom of Consciousness causes or has caused some people including
myself confusion. However, that confusion is alleviated by integrating the fact
that the first Axiom (Existence exists.), is the broadest of concepts
encompassing all that is including actions. However, all actions including
consciousness, presuppose something that exists to do the action as noted by Ms
Rand when she wrote:
They proclaim that there are no entities, that nothing exists but motion,
and blank out the fact that motion presupposes the thing which moves, that
without the concept of entity, there can be no such concept as “motion.” ~
Galt's Speech.
Thus consciousness presupposes existence, and the predicate that God exists
then forms a stolen concept fallacy. Dr Nathaniel Branden
wrote about stolen concept fallacies at http://www.nathanielbranden.com/catalog/articles_essays/the_stolen_concept.html
Best wishes
Robert Bumbalough said...
Hey Thanks Mr Bethrick
Its good to hear from you. May I post a link to your
blog to my twitter followers? I got 1470 real people who follow my musings on
the Forex markets, Objectivism and atheism. Some
would enjoy reading you.
Thanks for pointing out that I used the word dichotomy incorrectly. The
denotative meaning from dictionary.com states
di⋅chot⋅o⋅my
/daɪˈkɒtəmi/
Show Spelled Pronunciation [dahy-kot-uh-mee]
–noun, plural -mies.
1. division into two parts, kinds, etc.; subdivision
into halves or pairs.
2. division into two mutually exclusive, opposed, or
contradictory groups: a dichotomy between thought and action.
3. Botany. a mode of branching by constant forking, as
in some stems, in veins of leaves, etc.
4. Astronomy. the phase of the moon or of an inferior
planet when half of its disk is visible.
The third and forth meanings can be dismissed in the current context. My use of
the word was incorrect because division into two parts is not characteristic of
consciousness as it is an irreducible primary. This despite
that our brains are composed of multiple cerebral systems that have distinctive
independent evolutionary lineages. The brain works as
a gestalts to produce our consciousness. This alone is sufficient to
show theistic belief is unwarranted.
Its time for me to take my dogs to the park as they are
reminding me even now. Once again many thanks.
Robert aka FX_Infidel on twitter
Bahnsen
Burner said...
Good points, Robert. Yes, consciousness
presupposes existence in three primary ways: 1) by its nature as inherently
relational (consciousness *of* an object); 2) as an active product of something
which exists (i.e., the organism which possesses consciousness); and 3) it has
a purpose, namely to help an organism survive (try surviving without being
consciousness of anything).
But pointing out the primacy of existence annoys those who wish to evade it.
I'm reminded of Porter's comment about the primacy of existence:
"It hasn't been explicitly articulated [until Rand] so philosophers
feel no discomfort in straddling it. But, like Ayn
Rand's axiomatic concepts, they have to assume it in every assertion. Even when denying it as well." (ARTK, p. 199)
In my experience, raising the issue of metaphysical primacy in a debate with a
theist (especially presuppositionalists) tends to
draw silence from Objectivism's opponents. It's a weapon of mass destruction
against theistic worldviews, and as such, it's precisely what presuppositionalists *wish* they had in their apologetic
arsenal, but don't.
Regards,
Dawson
Bahnsen
Burner said...
By the way, Robert, I forgot to mention: Yes, you
are certainly welcome to post links to my blog on your site. I would be happy
to welcome new readers.
Regards,
Dawson
Justin said...
Dawson,
Since I surrendered my life to Jesus Christ, I’ve
noticed the impressive number of blogs and videos dedicated to atheists and
their pursuit to declare that God cannot be effectively explained or
rationalized in any manner. Before this time, I simply did not pay any
attention to the effort. During my meanderings from Christian web page to
Christian web page, stumbling across a site with an atheistic theme is
inevitable. I’m curious as to why the majority of atheists seem to spend so
much free time devoted to proving a point that we (Christians) do not have a clue
about our faith and why we believe. Why is the concern even there? Why are
Christians and the Bible most often centered in the scope?
It is clearly obvious that you are very well read
and have an extensive knowledge on various forms of thought from multiple view
points. Why don’t you place your efforts elsewhere, somewhere that might be of
some lasting benefit to others? What does this never ending debate gain you? I
have the same question for the Christians that persist in this same manner,
although I somewhat understand considering the validity of our discourse
concerning the eternal destination of a person that chooses to reject the one
true living God of the Bible.
It is my hope that these well crafted arguments do
not add to your pride, resulting in the hardening of your heart. It is my hope
that God will manifest Himself in your life in such a manner that His reality
is undeniable. It is my hope that you will one day believe that the Lord Jesus
died for you and was resurrected because of His perfect love for you. I will
truly be praying that these words reach you well and that you are able to give
them consideration.
-Justin
C.L. Bolt
said...
"Why don’t you place your efforts elsewhere,
somewhere that might be of some lasting benefit to others? What does this never
ending debate gain you? I have the same question for the Christians that
persist in this same manner..."
The reason the debate is "never ending" is because there are ever
those who contradict the truth in this life. Scripture does not allow the
Christian to turn a deaf ear and blind eye toward these people. Jesus and the
Apostles were constantly engaged in debate of some sort; one cannot read the
New Testament and get around this. See Acts 17 for an example. Further,
Scripture obligates us to involve ourselves in this manner. See 1 Peter 3.15
for an example. Your first question implies that such practices have no lasting
benefit for others, but this is not the case. If you do not have reasons for
why you believe what you do, or if you are in some sense unable to answer those
who contradict the truth that is fine, but do not come down on others for doing
what they are supposed to be doing.
Bahnsen
Burner said...
Hello Justin,
Thank you for your comments.
Unlike Chris Bolt, who believes that he is obligated to engage in debate, I see
it as a choice which one makes freely. And in fact, very little debate seems to
take place once I come onto the scene. More on that below.
Let me stress this: Christians defend their worldview as a response to “duty.”
By contrast, I write in pursuit of value.
You asked: “Why is the concern even there? Why are Christians and the Bible
most often centered in the scope?”
This is a very good question, my answer to which could occupy at least a blog
post of its own. But let me just make a few remarks here. For one, I enjoy
penning out and defending my verdicts. It is a most profound pleasure for me.
Also, I write what I know, what I have learned, what I have discovered. I write
first of all because it helps me understand why I hold the principles I do. But why Christianity? My writing actually targets more than
just Christianity – the truths which I argue for and endorse can easily be
applied to other forms of mysticism. But Christianity occupies my efforts for
several reasons. One, I know Christianity, both as an insider as well as an
Objectivist. I don’t know much about biochemical engineering, so I wouldn’t
choose that as my subject matter. Two, Christianity has had an enormous
influence on western culture, and it is my culture just as much as it is any
Christian’s. History tells us what happens when a worldview like Christianity
seizes control of a culture. It’s not pretty. I cannot in good conscience sit
on my hands while I know how devastating an effect Christianity can have on our
culture, on our lives, on our future, if people who know better, like myself, don’t do anything about it. It’s my own form of
activism.
You asked: “Why don’t you place your efforts elsewhere, somewhere that might be
of some lasting benefit to others?”
I do not know what lasting benefit others may take away from reading something
I have written. I doubt you know as well. However, many have written to me,
both in public comments as well as in private correspondence, to thank me for
my work. I am deeply gratified by this. However, “benefiting others” is not my
primary concern. I do not write for others, so much as I write for myself. For
it is in my self that I live, move and have my
being. I write to have my say, and having my say brings me great happiness,
immeasurable pleasure, and a very deep sense of reward unlike virtually
anything else I have ever done (performing my own music live is a close
second). So please make a note of this: my writing is a purely selfish
activity for me, and I am very proud of my work. (Do you think one should
occupy his time with something he’s not proud of?)
You asked “What does this never ending debate gain you?”
Actually, very few seem willing to debate me, even after I have engaged them or
interacted with their position statements. I almost get the impression that,
once I’ve had my say on a topic, debate seems to cease. Take Chris Bolt for
example. I’ve asked him simply to address a couple questions which I posed in
my blog above. He should have no difficulty answering them. But for some
reason, he remains silent. Meanwhile, he tells us that his bible instructs –
indeed “obligates” - him to engage non-believers in debate. Don’t you find that
odd?
Anyway, I hope these meager comments help shed some light on my motivations.
Regards,
Dawson
C.L. Bolt
said...
My position is not reducible to Kantian duty
ethics. When I affirm that my God exists, I am presupposing (odd word there but
that is okay) that God exists but not doing so independently of my own
consciousness since consciousness is necessary for affirmation. God does exist
independently of my own consciousness.
Bahnsen
Burner said...
Chris: “My position is not reducible to Kantian
duty ethics.”
No one said anything about Kant or your position reducing to Kant’s. You
believe you have a duty to obey your god. You believe that your primary moral
imperative is to obey your god’s commandments. This is a type of duty-based ethics, however you choose to slice it. Duty-based ethics
was around long before Kant. He simply sought to rarefy it.
On the Christian worldview, morality is all about subordinating one’s mind to
the control of another mind. This is the root of the sacrificial ethics modeled
by Christ on the cross. It is also the same operative ethical premise found in
any collectivist state: the individual is expected to sacrifice himself, either
to the politicians, to his neighbors, or to the “greater good,” etc.
For some additional thoughts on morality, see my blog Hitler
vs. Mother Theresa: Antithesis or Symbiosis?
Chris: “When I affirm that my God exists, I am presupposing (odd word there but
that is okay) that God exists but not doing so independently of my own
consciousness since consciousness is necessary for affirmation.”
Of course: affirmation is a type of conscious activity. You must be conscious
in order to affirm anything.
Chris: “God does exist independently of my own consciousness.”
See, I was right. You do make use of the primacy of existence principle
when you affirm your god-belief. But this probably had to be pointed out to you
as Christianity does not make this fact explicit. Nor is Christian theology
consistent with this metaphysics. When it gets to the Christian god, does the
universe exist independent of its consciousness? No, it doesn’t. First,
according to the Christian myth, the universe was created by your god’s
consciousness. The Christian god essentially commanded it into existence. On
this view, the existence of the universe is a consequence of some conscious
activity performed by your god. So here we have a metaphysics in which
existence depends on consciousness.
How about the identity of the things which exist
in the universe? This too is ultimately dependent on someone’s consciousness.
Not only did the Christian god, according to Christianity, create all the
things which exist in the universe, it gave them their identities as well. What
they are depends on some action of consciousness. Again, more
primacy of consciousness.
How about the actions which those entities perform? This too, according to what
the Christian worldview teaches, is another expression of the primacy of
consciousness. As Van Til puts it,
“God controls whatsoever comes to pass” (The Defense of the Faith, p.
160). How does the Christian do this? By means of conscious activity: it
chooses, it plans, it thinks, it commands, and all objects distinct from its
consciousness conform to the contents of its consciousness.
As I explained in my blog, the primacy of consciousness is the metaphysics of
subjectivism. When confronted with this analysis, Christian apologist Paul Manata had no alternative but to make the following
concession to my case: “in theism, there’s a sense in which reality is
subjective - based on the divine mind” (see my blog Theism
and Subjective Metaphysics). If your worldview in any way teaches that
reality, the universe, the world, etc., depends or is based on the conscious
activity of some mind (either real or imagined), your worldview is premised on
metaphysical subjectivism.
So, Chris, you make use of the primacy of existence in affirming that
your god exists (by intending to mean that it exists independent of your
consciousness), while asserting the primacy of consciousness in the content
of what you are affirming. Consequently, your metaphysical assumptions are
systemically in direct conflict with themselves.
Regards,
Dawson
C.L. Bolt
said...
One of your readers wrote, "I understand the
primacy of existence as objects of consciousness hold primacy over the subjects
and the primacy of consciousness affirming the opposite. But I do not see the
problem in affirming that existence exists, existence has metaphysical primacy
and that God exists. Where lies the violation in asserting that existence
exists and so does God?"
You responded, "Questions such as this suggest to me that the one posing
it either does not really grasp what the issue of metaphysical primacy deals
with, or that he is not integrating what the issue of metaphysical primacy
addresses with what theism entails."
I do not see where you address where the reader has gone wrong in his or her
understanding of metaphysical primacy or its relation to theism. The reader is
asking about the existence of God, and you go on to write about what it means
to say that God is conscious. While this is true, God exists. Where do you
answer the question that your reader posed to you concerning the *existence* of
God?
C.L. Bolt
said...
Actually I just noticed that your reader wrote the
issue out backwards, but my question should still apply.
Also, how does the fact that consciousness itself exists
play into this?
Bahnsen
Burner said...
Chris: “I do not see where you address where the
reader has gone wrong in his or her understanding of metaphysical primacy or its
relation to theism.”
I address this in my paragraph which begins with the following statement:
So in making the statement “existence exists and so does God,” one is in
fact declaring “existence exists independent of consciousness, and so does this
consciousness upon which existence depends,” which is a direct
self-contradiction.
The primacy of existence holds that existence exists independent of
consciousness. Affirming that a god exists translates to affirming that there
exists a consciousness upon which existence depends. Essentially it’s saying: existence exists independent of consciousness and
existence depends on consciousness.
Chris: “The reader is asking about the existence of God,”
Actually, the reader is asking why affirming both the primacy of
existence and the existence of a god is problematic. The very notion of
a god assumes the primacy of consciousness, which contradicts the primacy of
existence.
Chris: “Also, how does the fact that consciousness itself exists
play into this?”
It’s not clear to me what you’re asking here. Can you restate? Or did anything
I say above answer your question?
Regards,
Dawson
Clint Wells
said...
Hi Dawson –
I just wanted to take a moment to say thank you for this tremendous blog. Over
the last year I have come to reject Christianity, a faith I held (reformed
persuasion) for nearly ten years. This has been a difficult but immeasurably
satisfying endeavor. It's difficult here in the south. It's been a harrowing
experience personally with my family and friends as well as professionally as a
musician.
Because of my career in music I had a fairly well read blog and reputation
within a lot of Christian circles. This has provided many opportunities to
informally debate Christians. Your writing has been an extremely informative
and reliable resource. I'm particularly debating some presuppositionalist
seminary students and have referred to your blog several times as an aid in
articulating a rebuttal to their claims.
Sorry to dump this here. I briefly searched for a personal e-mail address and
could not find one.
Clint Wells
C.L. Bolt
said...
"Affirming that a god exists translates to
affirming that there exists a consciousness upon which existence depends."
In what way is the existence of God dependent upon consciousness?
I think what I am trying to get at with the other question is how any view
could ever affirm the primacy of consciousness since consciousness itself
exists. I think I understand that this is precisely what you are saying - no
view can, *consistently* - but how can an inconsistency even be brought to bear
upon the discussion when consciousness itself is existence? In other words, in
affirming the primacy of consciousness one is in actuality affirming the primacy
of existence since consciousness exists. Thus in charging a view with holding
to the primacy of consciousness the adherent may simply respond, "But
consciousness exists." Does this make sense?
Bahnsen
Burner said...
Part 1:
Chris: “In what way is the existence of God dependent upon consciousness?”
I don’t think there is a god in the first place. So your question seems
confused to me.
You hold that the existence of the universe depends on your god’s conscious
activity, do you not? You believe it created the universe, gave everything in
the universe its identity, and controls everything that happens in the universe
by means of its will – i.e., by some conscious activity. Right?
So by affirming the existence of your god, you are affirming the primacy of
consciousness.
Also, I would not say that “the existence of God [is] dependent upon consciousness,”
but rather that the notion of “God” is dependent on consciousness
(specifically, as a concoction of the believer’s imagination).
Chris: “I think what I am trying to get at with the other question is how any
view could ever affirm the primacy of consciousness since consciousness itself
exists. I think I understand that this is precisely what you are saying - no
view can, *consistently*”
Right – to affirm a position as truly representing reality is to make use of
the primacy of existence principle. To say “X is the case,” one implicitly
means “X is the case independent of anyone’s wishes, denials, ignorance,
preferences, temper tantrums, etc.” So in affirming a
position which reduces to the primacy of consciousness (such as theism does),
is to make use of a principle in affirming its (alleged) truth while assuming
another principle which contradicts that principle in its content. The
result is a performative inconsistency at the most
fundamental level of cognition. By its nature, it cannot be true since it is
self-undermining.
Chris: “but how can an inconsistency even be brought to bear upon the
discussion when consciousness itself is existence?”
Careful here. The concepts ‘consciousness’ and
‘existence’ do not refer to the same unit classes. The concept ‘existence’ is
much, much wider than the concept ‘consciousness’. The concept ‘existence’
includes things which possess consciousness (such as human beings, mammals,
reptiles, etc.) as well as things which do not possess consciousness (such as
rocks, trees, rivers, clouds, rubber bands, automobiles, etc.).
Chris: “In other words, in affirming the primacy of consciousness one is in
actuality affirming the primacy of existence since consciousness exists.”
Not exactly. In affirming a position which assumes or
reduces to the primacy of consciousness, one is making use of the
primacy of existence, but he’s probably not aware of it, since his worldview
does not make the issue of metaphysical primacy an explicit point of teaching.
Christianity is a case in point. Where, for instance, does either
Noah, Abraham, Moses, Isaiah, Obadiah, Jesus or Saul of Tarsus ever
weigh in on the issue of metaphysical primacy? Nowhere that I
can see.
[continued]
Bahnsen
Burner said...
Part 2
Chris: “Thus in charging a view with holding to the primacy of consciousness
the adherent may simply respond, ‘But consciousness
exists.’ Does this make sense?”
The adherent can say whatever he wants. Simply saying “But consciousness
exists” does not address the issue, since the fact that consciousness exists is
not under dispute. Objectivism, for instance, which affirms the primacy of
existence and rejects the primacy of consciousness, explicitly identifies the
fact that consciousness exists as one of its primary axioms. By charging a
position with assuming or holding the primacy of consciousness, one is not
denying the fact that consciousness exists.
Rather, when Objectivists point out that a position assumes or holds the
primacy of consciousness, they are pointing out that the position has reversed
the proper orientation between a subject and its objects in some manner.
To help one theist grasp this point in the case of his god-belief, I asked the
following two questions (cf. here):
1. Is your god conscious?
2. If yes, what is the orientation between the
Christian god as a subject of consciousness and the objects of its
consciousness?
Unfortunately, he ended up resisting a little more and then fleeing the
conversation after I addressed his further concerns.
Regards,
Dawson
Bahnsen
Burner said...
Hello Clint,
Welcome to my blog, and thank you for your nice comment. Congratulations on
your Declaration of Independence! Please know that I am not just trying to be
cozy when I say that I can relate to what you say. My emancipation ultimately
resulted from a single choice: to be honest to myself. I realized that while I
was trying to go along with the Christian worldview, I was being terribly
dishonest to myself. I invite all Christians to consider making this choice,
but I realize that it can be emotionally painful to make the first step. It's
difficult to understand that there's a most enriching reward to be gained. Even
harder when your worldview teaches you that personal gain is wicked.
You can e-mail me at: sortion at hotmail dot com.
Regards,
Dawson
C.L. Bolt
said...
"You hold that the existence of the universe
depends on your god’s conscious activity, do you not?"
I do.
"You believe it created the universe, gave everything in the universe its
identity, and controls everything that happens in the universe by means of its
will – i.e., by some conscious activity. Right?"
Right.
"So by affirming the existence of your god, you are affirming the primacy
of consciousness."
If God were to exist how would it follow that his consciousness is that upon
which the existence of God depends? ("...so does this consciousness upon
which existence depends...”)
NAL said...
Maybe the concepts should be called the
"primacy of consciousness" and the "primacy of existence of
everything except consciousness." But that just doesn't roll off the
tongue.
In order to achieve metaphysical primacy, the two concepts must be disjoint. I
think the "primacy of existence of everything except consciousness"
is implicit in the concept of "primacy of existence".
Anyway, a good point that I had not considered.
Bahnsen
Burner said...
Chris,
Look at what you just affirmed - that the existence of the universe depends on
your god's conscious activity. That's existence depending on consciousness. Do
you not see how your god’s “sovereignty” and “control” of everything in the
universe constitutes an expression of the primacy of consciousness? Does not
your god’s will (a form of consciousness) call all the shots always, everywhere
and in every thing? Is anything distinct from your
god’s consciousness independent of its will, its “plan,” its intentions? Isn’t
everything subject to its will? What holds metaphysical primacy in the
relationship between your god as a consciousness and everything in its scope of
awareness: your god as conscious subject, or the objects it is said to have
created? Everything Christians say about their god points to their god as the
one holding metaphysical primacy, and all its objects conforming to its will.
That’s the primacy of consciousness, Chris.
In terms of the subject-object relationship, this entails that the objects of
consciousness depend on and conform to the subject of consciousness. Your god
(the subject of its own consciousness) creates, orders, and controls all the
objects of its consciousness. This means: in the subject-object relationship in
which your god participates as a subject, the subject (your god) holds
metaphysical primacy over the objects of its consciousness. In other words,
consciousness holds metaphysical primacy. The existence, identity and causal
potentiality of all objects distinct from the subject depends on consciousness.
This is metaphysical subjectivism to a T, since the *subject* holds
metaphysical primacy over its objects, not the other way around.
Are you really having trouble seeing this?
Consider this question: do you believe that your god (as a subject of
consciousness) has the same orientation with respect to the objects of its consciousness, that you have as a subject with respect to
the objects of your consciousness?
I strongly doubt that you do.
Now you may be saying (as many theists have said before), that your god's
existence itself does not depend on anyone's consciousness. This can only mean
that the Christian worldview consists of inconsistent metaphysics: in the case
of your god, it exists independent of consciousness (since presumably it did
not create itself by an act of consciousness, and neither did anything else),
while everything distinct from your god was created by an act of consciousness.
Christian apologist Drew Lewis attempted to defend Christianity from my
critique in a similar manner, insisting that “God exists objectively and based
on no subjective cause. He didn't create Himself.” At the same time, he
affirms: “I do believe that whatever else exists is created by Him.”
In response to this, I explained:
the objection here is that
Christian god-belief is not subjective because it holds that the Christian god
did not create itself. Now it’s well and good that a system of god-belief holds
that its god did not create itself. Unfortunately, this does not sanitize
god-belief from its inherent subjectivism. The Objectivist argument which I
defend is not that god-belief is subjective because its god allegedly created
itself. Rather, the argument is that god-belief is subjective because it
ascribes metaphysical primacy to a subject (e.g., “God’s will”) over any and
all of its objects, regardless of whether or not that subject is said to have
created itself. That is where the root of subjectivism lies in the Christian
worldview: in the relationship between its god as a subject and any objects
distinct from itself.
If what you’re trying to get at is what Drew Lewis already tried to get at,
it’s already been taken care of.
Any other questions?
Regards,
Dawson
C.L. Bolt
said...
I will have to read the exchange between you and
Drew Lewis. I think something like that is what I was asking but I need to read
it when I am not so tired. :)
Here's an easy one in the meantime: What about those cases where it seems that
we do in some sense use "mind over matter" so to speak? We
"create" something or "sustain" something, etc.?
Bahnsen
Burner said...
Chris: “I will have to read the exchange between
you and Drew Lewis. I think something like that is what I was asking but I need
to read it when I am not so tired. :)”
Yes, get some rest. Then when you have some time, read through this
blog, and note the exchange between myself and Drew Lewis in the comments
section. (This was back when blogger allowed more than 4096 characters… Those
were the days!) Lewis had a hard time understanding the goal of my argument,
even though I had stated it very clearly. It’s in the title of the blog itself,
so he must not have been reading very carefully. He tried to accuse me of
several fallacies, but neither charge was sustainable.
Lewis apparently thought I was trying to assemble an argument which concludes
“therefore, God does not exist.” But no such arguments are needed. No one needs
to prove that the non-existent does not exist. I would not need to prove that
God does not exist any more than I would have to
prove that square circles do not exist, and essentially for the same reason
(see here). There's simply
no reason to take such an internally confused, self-contradictory notion so
seriously.
Rather, I was simply explaining why theism is inherently subjective. If theism
is inherently subjective, then there’s no need to wrestle with theism’s
particular claims – the whole shebang goes out the door. In the final analysis,
it is all a fantasy.
Chris: “What about those cases where it seems that we do in some sense use
‘mind over matter’ so to speak?”
I’m not aware of any actual instances of this which in fact violate the primacy
of existence. Do you know of any, or have something specific in mind?
Chris: “We ‘create’ something or ‘sustain’ something, etc.?”
I have never created or sustained the existence of something by means of
conscious activity (such as wishing, hoping, commanding, speaking, etc.). Have
you? If anyone has this ability, I’d really like to see it demonstrated.
Indeed, I think everyone in the whole world would find it very fascinating, to
say the least.
Regards,
Dawson
____________________________________________