An Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism - Alvin Plantinga at USC

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  • čas přidán 22. 02. 2013
  • Alvin Plantinga, known for his work in philosophy of religion, epistemology, metaphysics, and Christian apologetics, argues that some can know that God exists as a basic belief. | University of Southern California, 10/25/2005 | Explore more at www.veritas.org.
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Komentáře • 917

  • @cycodevilboy
    @cycodevilboy Před 10 lety +73

    Holy shit that was paaainful listening to the Q&A section of the lecture. It was like the students weren't even listening. This video should be evidence that philosophy needs to be part of the curriculum.

    • @pleaseenteraname1103
      @pleaseenteraname1103 Před rokem +1

      Yeah I completely agree and I feel the same way about many people in the comment section.

  • @Mrlittlegoose
    @Mrlittlegoose Před 9 lety +49

    Whether you agree or not with Plantinga, you gotta admire the guy's patience and graciousness when interacting with the student's questions, all of whom (the ones that asked questions at least) apparently did not understand his argument.

    • @Mrlittlegoose
      @Mrlittlegoose Před 9 lety

      PracticalPhilosophy
      Oh my....LOL

    • @LeviPaladin
      @LeviPaladin Před 9 lety +1

      PracticalPhilosophy That's a close approximation.

    • @sweenith
      @sweenith Před 9 lety

      PracticalPhilosophy The Lakers suck, and Jim Buss will see to it that they continue to suck.
      (btw I deny the charges of closed mindedness, being dumb, of ignoring reason, of thinking wishfully, etc.)

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +1

      @@LeviPaladin Lol.

  • @ryebreadisepic
    @ryebreadisepic Před 4 lety +43

    Watching this because HPS 200 is making me

    • @suiseic8562
      @suiseic8562 Před 4 lety +1

      same

    • @saybahmed7837
      @saybahmed7837 Před 4 lety +2

      bruh

    • @nyroc2134
      @nyroc2134 Před 4 lety +2

      I need 3% more for CR, pray for me.

    • @suiseic8562
      @suiseic8562 Před 4 lety

      @@nyroc2134 did we receive the grade for essay2?

    • @nyroc2134
      @nyroc2134 Před 4 lety +1

      @@suiseic8562 nah not yet.. I'm assuming I got near zero there unfortunately. I was doing well before that assignment actually. Anyways goodluck to y'all working on this one

  • @mytuber81
    @mytuber81 Před 9 lety +53

    This is an extremely well thought-out argument.

    • @mytuber81
      @mytuber81 Před 8 lety

      +Kertesian Taker Define "idiot" and then make a formal argument supporting your assertion.

    • @mytuber81
      @mytuber81 Před 8 lety

      ***** Second time;) Define "idiot" and then make a formal argument supporting your assertion.

    • @snuzebuster
      @snuzebuster Před 5 lety +1

      No, it's a very poorly thought out argument. See my critiques above.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety

      @@snuzebuster Your assertions equal shit.

    • @elijahbachrach6579
      @elijahbachrach6579 Před 3 lety

      @@mytuber81 If he where to define “idiot” without regard for how it is popularly defined, or if he did not take any trouble to separate, in the minds of his readers, the popular use of the word from the definition which he wanted to attach to it, he would almost certainly mislead anyone who heard his argument.
      It would be easy to commit the fallacy of equivocation where the error stems from using the middle term in two senses. It seems rational but it’s really just a pun.
      Im not certain what the point of your reply was, but the suggestion that all formal arguments are fabricated to support our biases is doomed to failure. the same trick was attempted by the sophists to undermine true philosophy and reason, and the refutation of it is as old as Plato.

  • @theclassicalpost
    @theclassicalpost Před 11 lety +49

    Absolutely hilarious to hear the questioners repeat his argument back to him thinking they had found a contradiction.

    • @elijahbachrach6579
      @elijahbachrach6579 Před 3 lety +11

      You have a darker sense of humor, then. It makes me sad to hear them. It’s not their fault. Naturalism has a tight grip on our schools.

    • @osmosis321
      @osmosis321 Před rokem +1

      @@elijahbachrach6579 what would you replace it with, theism? Lol!

    • @Raiddd__
      @Raiddd__ Před 6 měsíci

      no! just dont teach our kids that God (or anything like God) definitely doesnt exist! lol. It doesnt have to be replaced with some other deep philosophical world view. Thats for the Parents at home to do (assuming its a public school)@@osmosis321

    • @skfovbk
      @skfovbk Před měsícem

      at least they can have a class discussion about EAAN when learning evolution.

    • @wavethatcrashed9155
      @wavethatcrashed9155 Před měsícem

      @@osmosis321 Be neutral, PRE classes which are actually good and useful and make you think.

  • @kvnboudreaux
    @kvnboudreaux Před 8 měsíci +5

    I didn’t anticipate such humor from an analytic philosopher, I literally laughed out laughed several points

  • @blindlemon9
    @blindlemon9 Před 4 lety +68

    Wow. Nobody in the audience understood Plantinga at all.

    • @davidlara993
      @davidlara993 Před 3 lety +15

      It is full of naturalists... What did you expect? Philosophical and epistemological understanding?

    • @gustavom6615
      @gustavom6615 Před 3 lety

      David Lara99 not all naturalists are stupid

    • @davidlara993
      @davidlara993 Před 3 lety +7

      @@gustavom6615 I am not saying that, although the philosophical conception itself has logical flaws, I am saying that those who asked him at this conference does not understand neither evolution nor their own worldview.

    • @gustavom6615
      @gustavom6615 Před 3 lety +1

      David Lara99 oh ok

    • @pascotemplo8869
      @pascotemplo8869 Před 2 lety

      A priori rejection of T and dogmatic tethering to N despite untenable internal contradictions.

  • @elijahbachrach6579
    @elijahbachrach6579 Před 6 lety +26

    Who was that student who left the microphone saying "err, ahh... OK, whatever."? That was rude. I hope his peers told him how inhospitable that comment was. Why would you want to act dismissively toward a renowned academic who came to speak at your school?

    • @Tomas-ym1sq
      @Tomas-ym1sq Před 6 lety +12

      Elijah Bachrach Alvin said that academia was full of naturalist. The student did that to get brownie points with his circle jerk of pompous arrogant classmates. Plantinga is like acid to these atheist lol.

  • @rodionraskolnikov5948
    @rodionraskolnikov5948 Před 10 lety +28

    For those of you having a difficult time grasping what Plantinga is saying, think of it this way. In the Matrix, humans have false beliefs, but their neurophysiology still functions in a manner that produces a type of behavior. If the world is not in fact the way we perceive that it is, but we perceive it in such a way that it does not hinder behavior that is conducive to our existence, then the truth content of our beliefs are irrelevant.

    • @GodzApostle
      @GodzApostle Před 10 lety +3

      Indeed it is such a profoundly simple and elegant argument that the only course of action left for the atheist to take is to pretend she doesn't understand the argument and by doing so she can give herself an excuse to attack a strawman.

    • @reapheavystorm
      @reapheavystorm Před 10 lety +1

      since when can you speak for all humans? apart from not being able to perceive reality with any warrant, like being stuck in the matrix, you also dont have any grant for knowing that you arent alone in this world being surrounded by mindless humans who only seem to be able to comprehend physical reality as you do.

    • @rodionraskolnikov5948
      @rodionraskolnikov5948 Před 10 lety +1

      reapheavystorm What is your point?

    • @reapheavystorm
      @reapheavystorm Před 10 lety +1

      Rodion Raskolnikov
      my point is that naturalists are one messed up group of people who accept impossible ideas without much reflection.

    • @jorgemittelmann620
      @jorgemittelmann620 Před 5 lety

      Rodion Raskolnikov great 👍! Thanks

  • @boogiefierce8498
    @boogiefierce8498 Před 3 lety +9

    The questioners with their obnoxious, dry, smart aleck-y attitudes despite them, for the most part, not really understanding what he was saying, is annoying.

  • @fawzynaguib6323
    @fawzynaguib6323 Před 5 lety +2

    Do anyone have the booklet notes he is refering to?

  • @GodzApostle
    @GodzApostle Před 10 lety +42

    Question and answer section was unbearable. Goes to show that just about anyone can go to college these days

    • @aceyirl
      @aceyirl Před 7 lety +1

      Uwot Mate that was exactly my thoughts... it's always so dreadful to listen to the questions sadly...

    • @user-dl8ux4up6m
      @user-dl8ux4up6m Před 6 lety

      Uwot Mate Stick the tampon out of your ass, tampon boy!

    • @user-dl8ux4up6m
      @user-dl8ux4up6m Před 6 lety

      MEN WORRYING ABOUT MEN

    • @dihe1392
      @dihe1392 Před 4 lety +2

      @@user-dl8ux4up6m i think you've been using tampons wrong

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety

      Yes, it was. Killing mediocrity.

  • @MaximusWolfe
    @MaximusWolfe Před 9 lety +16

    What snotty audience members and questions/responses to his having answered those questions.

  • @JoshuaHults
    @JoshuaHults Před 10 lety +15

    i hate speeches with a dumb question tagged at the end from audience members. This is how you know atheism and naturalism are a religion, people will defend the belief against reason and logic and get upset when their religion is in question. These are the signs of a religious ideology not a fact or theory.
    For instance if i was to question the law of gravity people would just laugh, nobody would get upset or angry because i have done nothing to their religious belief by saying it, but if you attack evolution or naturalism its instant belief defending time, AKA hammer time.
    In both cases theism and naturalism the persons react the same exact way when their belief system comes under attack, very defensive and there must be an explanation even if i do not know it now to save it. The major difference is the theist at least knows he has a religion.

    • @skewCZ
      @skewCZ Před 10 lety

      Joshua Hults
      The same is true when you discuss politics or various social issues though. And sometimes art or matters of taste. Are these religions too?
      I would just see that as an indication that a person feels strongly about said issue, that it's an important part of their identity, that's why they get passionate about it.
      I don't see how that warrants any of these to be considered religion.

    • @JoshuaHults
      @JoshuaHults Před 10 lety

      ***** No this is a different response than what you get from art or taste. This is the " Your stepping on my worldview " response.
      Surely you can see the difference between a worldview being stepped on and someones favorite painting being critiqued.

    • @skewCZ
      @skewCZ Před 10 lety

      Joshua Hults
      _This is the " Your stepping on my worldview " response._
      That's exactly what I meant though. Worldview =/= religion.
      (and sure, this response will be uncommon when you're criticizing someone's favourite piece of art or something like that, but not unheard of either... but that's a minor, unimportant point, really)

    • @Rayvvvone
      @Rayvvvone Před 9 lety

      "people will defend the belief against reason and logic"
      - lol.. you think that atheists are against reason and logic.. wow. HOW STRANGE

    • @snuzebuster
      @snuzebuster Před 5 lety

      There's a grain of truth there. However, I think another factor is at play. That is, it is much, much easier to recognize that an argument is bad than it is explain of even find exactly why it is bad. EAAN is a bad argument and I've explained why in several posts here. But if I had just heard the argument and tried to address it I'd probably have a hard time and fall down some of the same holes the audience members did.

  • @honawikeepa5813
    @honawikeepa5813 Před 3 lety +2

    Always great to listen to.

  • @LogosTheos
    @LogosTheos Před 11 lety +12

    That 1st questioner got smoked and all she could say is "I disagree".

  • @honawikeepa5813
    @honawikeepa5813 Před 5 lety +6

    Methodology is king. Awesome message.

  • @snuzebuster
    @snuzebuster Před 5 lety +5

    The most honest take on this argument is that, at best, it provides reason to think the epistemic probability of our cognitive faculties being reliable under the assumption of E&N is inscrutable. But if the epistemic probability is inscrutable then the actual probability may just as well be high as low and so it does not provide any sort of defeater for the belief in N under the assumption of E&N. Frankly I think the case is worse than that for the argument as I don't even buy the arguments that naturalistic evolution (biological AND social evolution included) would be unlikely to produce reliable cognitive faculties. I'm not going to argue that again as I have several times already in these comments.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +1

      @César Rabbit Boring, repetitive. Next.

    • @jean-patrickpelletier4162
      @jean-patrickpelletier4162 Před 4 lety +2

      If the probability is inscrutable, then it may be actually high or low, but we wouldn't know. In case it's high, we wouldn't have any reasons to reject N. In case it's low, we couldn't rationally adopt any particular belief be it N, E or T, because R could be applied to every single one of them ; hence, we would have to withhold judgement on any belief. But because we're under the assumption that the probability is inscrutable, we can't rationally pick between 'high' and 'low', thus we can't pick between N and T, which means we have to withhold judgement on the truth of N. Anyone who does not withhold judgement and believes in N would be irrational in such a scenario.

    • @jean-patrickpelletier4162
      @jean-patrickpelletier4162 Před 4 lety

      @César Rabbit It seems to me that methodological N would be fine ; it's only metaphysical N that is prohibited here. Mind expanding a little?

    • @jean-patrickpelletier4162
      @jean-patrickpelletier4162 Před 4 lety

      @César Rabbit Maybe he doesn't want his argument to be applied methodological naturalism. From context, I thought it was obvious he's speaking only about metaphysical naturalism

    • @bertbranson5057
      @bertbranson5057 Před 4 lety +4

      @César Rabbit, ad hominien, I think, because I read many such comments as the one you presented, and there is a common thread: fear. I understand why some people are so preoccuppied with controlling the debate: who wants a 'Divine' foot lodging itself in one's door to threaten one's 'beliefs' about the world? I think we are 'whistlin' past the graveyard.
      The beliefs of humanity are ancient, many based upon reflections on their experience and nature - and we moderns with presupposed 'superior' ideologies and techniques would love to do our nice little 'incantations' and academic 'rituals' donned in full media theatrics, and with a magic eraser wipe all the 'evil' religious 'superstitions' away and pretend that the pasteurization and homogenization of culture has launched us into some secular 'enlightenment' and prepare us for a brave new world. A world where you never have any doubts about that 'rascally' religious 'stuff', and you needn't worry about that nagging suspicion that our 'just so' scientific orthodoxy that we place such 'faith' in, is wrong, horribly so. Better hope your 'superstitions' are true, because if there is more to the world than your tidy little alibis can allow, your little house of cards may come tumbling down, and 'with a great crash', and all learn the hard way there is a darkness in the world and our hearts we desperately wanted to ignore and pretend is not portentous and apocalyptic. And that these 'ancient' beliefs we chide were more honest than we.
      Maybe one day far into the future, if the world survives, humanity will reflect back on this time in total disbelief that this generation in its boasts of enligthenment and science were perhaps the most superstitious of all. And wrong.

  • @tibbar1000
    @tibbar1000 Před 3 měsíci

    I never took philosophy. Just curious; is this typical…is this a good example of what I missed? I am serious and not looking for an altercation.

  • @sickstrings
    @sickstrings Před 10 lety +77

    Plantinga ripped naturalists to shreds and they react by tossing in a bunch of red herrings. Typical. Hmm

    • @poguemahone1031
      @poguemahone1031 Před 9 lety

      I've got a red herring in my pants that you can has. lmao

    • @snuzebuster
      @snuzebuster Před 5 lety +7

      Are you kidding me? Plantinga's argument grossly over simplifies the picture and then draws bogus conclusions from those over simplifications. Yes, it's conceivable that "Paul" could survive that one survival challenge because he just happened to randomly hold two innane beliefs that luckily coincide to produce an adaptive reaction to the situation. However, no individual is going to survive one challenge and then pass their genes on to the next generation, and surer than anything Paul's screwed up cognitive faculties are going to get him killed and probably sooner rather than later. Yes, would expect an uneducated savage's ideas about things far removed from daily experience that have little to no direct bearing on survival to probably be largely unreliable. However, naturalism is not the musings of an ignorant savage, it is the consensus worldview of the modern scientific community based on logic, math and science --tools that we've developed over millennia of cultural evolution--and mountains of scientific evidence amassed over the past few centuries by some of the greatest minds in human history. As such, there is no good reason to be radically skeptical about the truth of this worldview. EAAN is a major FAIL.

    • @futile-evenings
      @futile-evenings Před 5 lety +3

      @César Rabbit lol typical response problem is ppl who bring arguments against evolution do so because they have a good grasp of it. The proponents are the ones who cling on to it religiously.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety

      @Rafal Omnom Inintelligible grammar. Were you born in a junkyard?

    • @asix9178
      @asix9178 Před rokem +3

      @@futile-evenings Just the opposite. People that bring arguments against evolution, typically has very little grasp of it. Those that have a good grasp of evolution, see how ridiculous arguments against it are.

  • @jjhot254
    @jjhot254 Před 11 lety +3

    the students are not up to par, they are misunderstand what he is saying, he should have this talk at a university of a higher caliber

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety

      They are profoundly retarded.

  • @josephluis5801
    @josephluis5801 Před rokem +3

    Do people take this guy seriously?!

    • @CesarClouds
      @CesarClouds Před rokem +1

      The majority of analytic philosophers disagree with him about the EAAN.

  • @honahwikeepa2115
    @honahwikeepa2115 Před měsícem

    He's so intelligent and simple. Brilliant Platinga.

  • @jamesfrancese6091
    @jamesfrancese6091 Před 3 lety +1

    Many commenters here seem to think because they share the outermost superfice of Plantinga’s worldview, that they are in a position to perfectly approve of his argument, as well as ruefully mock the untrained questions from students in the audience. And no, Plantinga’s argument is not even “pretty much the same” as the Argument from Reason (against naturalism) many will know from C.S. Lewis, who first popularized and then abandoned it after facing its refutation by fellow Christian philosopher GEM Anscombe. If someone is familiar with Anscombe’s analysis they will know why Plantinga’s argument is not even one against naturalism per se. In summary it’s not just some apologist’s syllogism to be delivered as a decisive bon mot, but the complex product of a sprawling epistemological project which Plantinga has laid out in a number of books and papers, with many fellow theists voicing reservation on his conclusions. And granted, many interested in that work also seem to be watching this video.

  • @stevenkazoroski5591
    @stevenkazoroski5591 Před 9 lety +4

    This argument sounds really weird to me. Basically it seems to be saying:
    1. If X is true, then a person who believes in X must admit to the possibility of holding false beliefs.
    2. We already established that this hypothetical takes place in a universe where X is true.
    3. Therefore, even though the person has the ability to hold false beliefs, their belief in X is true anyway.
    This argument simply sets X=naturalistic evolution.

    • @ReallyWeirdThingsCom
      @ReallyWeirdThingsCom Před 9 lety +3

      Steven Kazoroski Not quite. If a person believes X (naturalism + evolution) is true, then that person must admit that they can not know if X is true. Understand? The belief has an inherent logical self-defeater. A belief in the truth of X necessarily demands that a belief in the truth of X is unreliable, so how can it be rational to believe in the truth of X in the first place?
      This isn't exactly analogous, but it might help to illustrate Plantinga's argument somewhat: It's similar to holding a belief that you're absolutely wrong about absolutely everything. That belief is logically self-defeating, right? Because, if you believe you're absolutely wrong about absolutely everything, you must also believe that you're wrong about being wrong about absolutely everything. And, if you're wrong about being wrong about absolutely everything, then there must be something you're not wrong about, and your original belief is unfounded. So, the belief "I'm wrong about absolutely everything" is logically self-defeating right out of the gate.
      Plantinga's argument is similar -- If you believe that evolution and naturalism is true, then you must believe that everything you believe could be the result of nothing more than your evolutionary programming forcing you into that belief -- whether or not it has any basis in reality. So, logically, if you believe that naturalism and evolution are both true, you must also believe that every belief you hold, as far as you're able to reasonably determine, has no better than a 50/50 chance of being true. But, that includes your belief about naturalism and evolution. So, logically, if you believe naturalism and evolution are true, you must also believe that you have no idea whether or not naturalism and evolution are true. And, if you have no idea whether or not naturalism and evolution are true, it's irrational to believe that naturalism and evolution are true.

    • @stevenkazoroski5591
      @stevenkazoroski5591 Před 9 lety

      ReallyWeirdThings.Com Why can't this person believe they are wrong about everything except for the belief that they are wrong about everything? This argument sounds like it says that naturalism and evolution being true is a prerequisite for the ability to form false beliefs. I believe people have the capacity to have false beliefs, therefore it's OK for me to believe evolution and naturalism.

    • @ReallyWeirdThingsCom
      @ReallyWeirdThingsCom Před 9 lety +2

      Steven Kazoroski A person certainly can believe that the only correct belief they hold is that all other beliefs they hold are false. There's no logical problem with that. But, they can't hold the belief that ALL beliefs they hold, without exception, are false. It's a logically self-defeating belief. Because, of course, If ALL beliefs you hold are actually false, and one of the beliefs you hold is that ALL beliefs you hold are false, then that belief isn't false. Plantinga's argument asserts that, in a similar way, holding a belief that N (naturalism) and E (evolution) are both true necessarily gives rise to a similar self-defeater.
      And, no, the argument is, in no way, suggesting that N+E being true is a prerequisite for the ability to form false beliefs. It merely says that if you do hold N+E to be true, then you must logically accept that the reliability of ANY belief you hold is probably either very low, or entirely inscrutable -- and, of course, this includes your belief that N+E is true. So, if you hold the belief that N+E is true you must also hold the belief that your belief that N+E is true is very low, or entirely inscrutable. And, of course, it's not rational to hold a belief as being true if you accept that the reliability of it being true is very low.
      And, yes, EVERYBODY has the capacity to have false beliefs. There's absolutely no arguing that. But, that's not the point of the argument. The point of the argument is that if I don't accept that both N+E is true -- that is to say, if I reject either N or E, or both -- I must accept a *possibility* that any belief I hold to be true may, in fact, be false. But, if I accept N+E as being true, then I'm logically forced to accept that I can not reasonably determine with any respectable degree of reliability whether ANY belief I hold to be true is actually true or not. And, since one of the beliefs I hold is that N+E is true, that holds true for that belief as well. And, it's irrational to believe something for which I accept that I am unable to reliably determine the truth of.
      Get it? If I, say, reject N as being true, then I'm free to say that I might be wrong but I don't think I am, and remain rational. I'm free to think that I'm *most probably* correct in my belief, and remain rational. If, on the other hand, I accept N+E as being true, I can't say that. I'm forced by the logical argument to instead say that, since I believe N+E to be true, I therefore have no reasonable idea whether I'm wrong or not regarding ANY belief I hold. And, if I have no idea regarding the truth of any belief I hold, N+E being true is one of the beliefs I hold so, therefore, I have no idea whether or not N+E is true. And, it's irrational to hold a belief as being true if you accept that you have no reasonable idea whether it's true or not.

    • @stevenkazoroski5591
      @stevenkazoroski5591 Před 8 lety

      ReallyWeirdThings.Com That sounds like a pretty good explanation and I understand the arguement a lot better now. The only thing I have left to say is that naturalists and evolutionists tend to be less concerned about beliefs and more interested in actually knowing what is and isn't true.

    • @snuzebuster
      @snuzebuster Před 5 lety

      @@ReallyWeirdThingsCom The problem is that Plantinga is wrong that evolution would not select for reliable (truth finding) cognitive faculties. It would, because an accurate mapping of one's physical environment has great survival advantage to one who possess it. Of course, this only a very limited range of concrete knowledge and we might expect that the reliability of our faculties would fall off precipitously as we approach answering a question as abstract as "What is the nature of reality." However, over millennia of human social progress we have developed tools for compensating for deficiencies in our biologically evolved mental "hardware." These "software" so to speak are such things as logic, mathematics and science. So, yes, we should be highly skeptical of an uneducated savage's musings on such matters, but we needn't be nearly as skeptical about nor is there anything self-defeating in accepting the near consensus worldview of the modern intellectual community. Plantinga's arguments completely ignore much of this nuance. They are oversimplified and lame.

  • @radmcbad1576
    @radmcbad1576 Před 3 lety +5

    These arguments might seem like most people will just understand them right away but the complexity of them actually takes a deeper analysis.. even if you think that they are wrong. To put it in a different way, if it was analysis of a chess game, you would have to scan each move with stockfish for 5 minutes.

    • @asix9178
      @asix9178 Před rokem +1

      Which do you think is more beneficial to survival, reliable or unreliable cognitive faculties?
      Checkmate

    • @radmcbad1576
      @radmcbad1576 Před rokem

      @@asix9178 reliable cognitive faculties are much more beneficial.. in this way, you should probably analyze and be cognizant of your own confirmation biases.

    • @pleaseenteraname1103
      @pleaseenteraname1103 Před rokem +3

      I feel the same way I thought the first time I heard the argument, that I had a pretty good understanding of it, but the more and more I started to learn about, the more and more I realize just how little I actually knew about it before.

    • @pleaseenteraname1103
      @pleaseenteraname1103 Před rokem +2

      @@asix9178 he’s addressed this before.

    • @pleaseenteraname1103
      @pleaseenteraname1103 Před rokem +2

      @@radmcbad1576 I find it hilarious that he’s even using this as an objection plantinga has been addressing this objection for decades at this point ever since he developed the argument to begin with, because he anticipated this subject.

  • @samayirx12
    @samayirx12 Před 11 lety +1

    Yeah i asked him about that, He said something about how that's not necessarily true or whatever. Idk but i remember putting constant questioning on him about that he answered the questions well and they were well reasoned. It was a few years ago so i cannot necessarily cite it back to you since it was an informal face to face thing

  • @jensswales
    @jensswales Před 5 lety +1

    the 4 "f":s quote was quite hilarious..

  • @anthonymccarthy4164
    @anthonymccarthy4164 Před 4 lety +3

    I think it's a rule of internet invective that someone who uses the name Thomas Paine is an idiot.

  • @T12J7
    @T12J7 Před 11 lety +4

    Because Dawkins tells to man, what the man's heart wanna hear, "The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked" (Jer 17:9).

  • @anthonymccarthy4164
    @anthonymccarthy4164 Před 4 lety +2

    That second boy questioner is so dense he didn't get that Plantinga answered his question, he just kept posing it with his false characterization of Plantinga's argument.

  • @samayirx12
    @samayirx12 Před 11 lety +1

    I've heard an argument from one long ago, i dont remember the details of it fully but it the argument was that the existence of God/dieties is/are self evident. I remember not taking it seriously at the time but the person arguing this did bring up very good points and did answer objections pretty well. My conclusion in all of it is that if a person can justify their belief with a reason or clear justification, then they are entitled to that belief and no im not talking about personal experience

  • @kevinlongmusic
    @kevinlongmusic Před 10 lety +2

    I admire Plantinga for being one of the best on his side of the line-- I read his book "Where the conflict really lies" and it definitely stretched my mind out. I really have tried to give him as much time as I could to actually make a truly persuasive argument against naturalism, hours and hours of reading his stuff, but my patience has run out.

  • @realitychecker1298
    @realitychecker1298 Před 4 lety +7

    His goal was to refute metaphysical naturalism and not to prove evolution with it is a "problem", he's never demonstrated that and NO experiments have ever been performed to confirm it. He simply ASSUMED it so his argument fails.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +1

      "Experiments" to debunk a phylosophical argument?
      You are so ignorant, ridiculous and pathetic.
      You are a lab coat worshipper, a fool blinded by scientism.
      And now, your argument is?

    • @realitychecker1298
      @realitychecker1298 Před 4 lety +2

      @@martam4142 Yes, since *philosophy is speculative, you're not knoweldgeable enough to urge your point.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety

      @@realitychecker1298 Hahaha.

    • @realitychecker1298
      @realitychecker1298 Před 4 lety +3

      @@martam4142 Confirmed.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +1

      @@realitychecker1298 Confirmed that you believe in fairies.
      Now, please, address the argument.
      Unless you have nothing.
      Ouch! You have nothing :)

  • @Josyeliel
    @Josyeliel Před 11 lety +1

    In QandA people really didn't understand that by belief he meant every idea produced by the human mind

  • @MCulpa
    @MCulpa Před 11 lety

    I definitely saw several things that would count as arguments. An argument is premises+conclusion. However I don't see how what you're saying invalidates anything Dr. Plantinga asserted.

  • @Gooddaddy1963
    @Gooddaddy1963 Před 6 lety +9

    very great exposition. prof. plantinga has proven his true worth as a great philosopher of religion. it will take a long time for another to take his place

  • @yaja6827
    @yaja6827 Před 10 lety +4

    that's exactly the argument, and that's why it provides a universal defeater for all one's beliefs, and this defeater cannot be defeated. You're objection isn't very sound, if you want to see some better objections see the book "Naturalism Defeated?"

  • @changeinjoy
    @changeinjoy Před 11 lety +2

    While this lacked and great rhetoric or brilliant sound bytes, but the logic was strong-which is, of course, far more significant.

    • @asix9178
      @asix9178 Před rokem

      Sorry, strong ‘logic’ would not pretend that unreliable cognitive faculties are more beneficial to survival than reliable cognitive faculties.

    • @DarkArcticTV
      @DarkArcticTV Před 9 měsíci

      @@asix9178 nice emotional appeal you got there; but of course it would, which is why we have a whole cognitive science studying bias, which is why many scientific hypotheses are useful in their domain but false, which is why *according to atheists* religious belief is false but helped us survive.

    • @philologosjazz
      @philologosjazz Před 4 měsíci

      @@asix9178 genuine question - why not? Unless by reliability you mean useful for survival? But what he meant by reliability was in terms of producing beliefs that are true.

  • @chrisshrock
    @chrisshrock Před 4 lety +1

    The most responses to Plantinga in the philosophical literature say that Plantinga is wrong to think that our cognitive faculties would be unreliable on Naturalism and Evolution. Rather, they say, there is reason to think that our faculties would be reliable, even with regard to non-empirical topics or topics irrelevant to our survival. The problem with this response is that, if it is right, PLANTINGA WINS. Since humankind overwhelmingly believes in non-natural forces--God, spirits, dualism about the human mind, ghosts, gods, karma?, progress--the reliability of our cognitive faculties would, on its own, undermine Naturalism. EITHER WAY, Naturalism is in trouble here.

    • @chrisshrock
      @chrisshrock Před 4 lety

      In the Q & A here, it seems that several questioners confuse the reliability of cognitive faculties to make true beliefs with the reliability of cognitive faculties to prompt survival-conducive behavior. "R" is the first.

    • @AsixA6
      @AsixA6 Před 6 měsíci

      False. Nobody is claiming all beliefs under E&N would be true. Also, the same problem exists for theists. If our faculties are supposedly reliable thanks to an invisible magician, why are there so many different worldviews? Why doesn’t every god believer believe in the same deity?

  • @TheMusicWiz
    @TheMusicWiz Před 11 lety +4

    His rigorous "philo-lingo" doesn't fare very well with the MTV generation

  • @snuzebuster
    @snuzebuster Před 5 lety +4

    Well, obviously Huxley was wrong about belief being involved in the causal chain of behavior. A VERY simple illustration: Unless I believe that there is something in the refrigerator that I want to eat I'm not going to get up and go to the refrigerator. The idea that the content of beliefs doesn't affect behavior is such obvious bollix.

    • @salviati8078
      @salviati8078 Před 4 lety +1

      R = reliably true content/belief. The content/belief can affect behaviour which is in turn perfectly adaptive with content/belief being false.

    • @snuzebuster
      @snuzebuster Před rokem

      @@salviati8078 No, it's possibly adaptive not perfectly adaptive. Paul's deranged CF might save him by chance from the tiger, but will get him killed before too long, whereas someone with more reliable cf will be more likely to survive long enough to reproduce. Hence, there's a tendency towards reliability. However, obviously, the reliability our cf is pretty spotty. However over aeons of cultural evolution we've developed cognitive tools such as logic, math and science, that help us overcome those limitations to some extent and this is a key factor completely missing from Plantinga's argument.

  • @samayirx12
    @samayirx12 Před 11 lety

    That depends on the theist. Some presuppose and others do not

  • @samayirx12
    @samayirx12 Před 11 lety

    Yes, they do that. However, in a debate or discussion forum, i see many who do not presuppose but rather bring God into the picture

  • @T12J7
    @T12J7 Před 11 lety +4

    So, to me, it appears that in this hypotetical evolutionary scenario, it would be survival enhancing to have more logical brain than others, despite the exact belief that the logical brain holds at the specific moment.

  • @realitychecker1298
    @realitychecker1298 Před 4 lety +9

    He hasn't demonstrated there's a problem with belief in naturalism and evolution but simply assumes one and then builds an argument attempting to refute naturalism. And, as other users below point out, he doesn't bother to distinguish between metaphysical and methodological naturalism. If this is a serious argument in philosophy I would hate to see an unserious one.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +2

      Lol. He has demonstrated that believing you can have Reliability under N+E is possible, but that it is also IRRATIONAL.

    • @realitychecker1298
      @realitychecker1298 Před 4 lety +4

      @@martam4142 You need to learn the argument as you have no idea of what you're talking about.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +3

      @@realitychecker1298 Sweet Jesus. The EAAN main objective is, precisely, to show how N+E are incompatible while you want to remain rational.
      Reason and N+E are incompatible.

    • @championdebater7088
      @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +3

      @@martam4142 Plantinga has never demonstrated they're incompatible, he assumes they are.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety

      @@championdebater7088 Void assertion. Show us the argument (assuming you have one).

  • @tonygaytan9848
    @tonygaytan9848 Před 3 měsíci

    Wise man, a naturalist in his creation towards purpose.

  • @insidetrip101
    @insidetrip101 Před 11 lety +1

    I think you bring up a fairly decent point. I REALLY would have liked to have been able to ask him if his position is that "blind" evolution necessitates that practical knowledge (as opposed to theoretical wisdom when he alludes to Descartes) is unreliable too.
    It seems that he admits practical knowledge is reliable in "blind" evolution when he agrees that beliefs can change from environment to environment. So I'm left wondering if he thinks there is no connection between prudence and wisdom.

    • @Raiddd__
      @Raiddd__ Před 6 měsíci

      10 years late, lol. But no. He no where in this video admitted that any knowledge is reliable given blind evolution and naturalism, including practical knowledge. For example, his Tiger scenario where paul runs from the tiger. He gives several examples of beliefs that could cause precisely the same behavior of evading the tiger despite most of them being false (and contradictory to each other). Yes he of course admits that beliefs can change from environment to environment. All that is saying is that the environment is in some way correlated, or even can cause beliefs. But the environment causing beliefs certainly doesnt mean that those beliefs are true, for even in the case of paul thinking the tiger is the starting signal for a 1500 meter race for fun, the tiger is still very much the thing that causes him to run, despite the belief of the tiger being a starting signal in a race being clearly false.

    • @AsixA6
      @AsixA6 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Raiddd__ In his tiger example, the person believing the truth is definitely going to survive. Every scenario you could think of, the person believing the truth is going to survive. Not so with the people holding false beliefs. ‘Truth’ is beneficial to survival.
      Put the. Person that ran from the tiger with the expectation of heading toward the tiger to pet it, in a different scenario and they die. Wanna eat that food up ahead, turn the other way and run. Wanna procreate? Run the other way. The only person surviving the tiger, eating and getting laid is the person believing the truth.

  • @championdebater7088
    @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +7

    I agree, Pigliucci refuted this argument and pointed out that it doesn't follow from the fact that if our mental faculties aren't reliable then naturalism is false (Plantinga didn't aim it towards methodological naturalism so his argument is a dud).

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +2

      Pigliucci did not refute the EEAN.
      I doubt no one ever will.

    • @championdebater7088
      @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +6

      @@martam4142 It's been refuted more than once and the general consensus among philosophers is that it's failed to do what it sets out for, refuting metaphysical naturalism but, regardless, it left methodological naturalism untouched so it's pretty much useless. Pigliucci squarely refuted it by pointing out the formal fallacy Plantinga committed, a non- sequitur because it simply doesn't follow from dubious mental faculties that naturalism is false. You didn't prove your case that Pigliucci didn't refute it. Sorry.

  • @cruelsuit1
    @cruelsuit1 Před 9 lety +3

    You can't equate the reactive awareness of lower animals with the predictive intellect of human beings. It is arbitrary and false to say that frog thoughts are physiologically identical to human thoughts. It is wrong to compare an amphibian act of survival to a truth evaluation.
    You can just as easily say that the integrity of truth recognition is absolutely essential for an animal that uniquely depends on the accurate evaluation and manipulation of the real world in order to survive. The evidence of separation from "lower" brain function being that human animals no longer are confined to an econiche by physical traits or behavior which is dependent on the immediate environment.
    The fact that we can exist universally in any environment/econiche because we have discovered the "truths" about each environment proves that human beings have transcended simple physical reaction to the real world.
    You can argue that the emergent mind of man is the very creation of "true beliefs." And the ability to distinguish a specious concept from a reasonable concept is, in fact, a survival skill which can be selected for in human evolution.

    • @SomeRandomDude000000
      @SomeRandomDude000000 Před 8 lety

      +cruelsuit1
      "You can't equate the reactive awareness of lower animals with the predictive intellect of human beings."
      The idea that one species(humans) is unlike all the others is as undarwinian as you can get

    • @cruelsuit1
      @cruelsuit1 Před 8 lety

      Wayne Ekeh
      Different species have widely varying sensory traits and experiences. One species IS unlike all the others in its intellect. That's not "undarwinian" to recognize a unique trait of a species.

    • @SomeRandomDude000000
      @SomeRandomDude000000 Před 8 lety

      cruelsuit1 sorry the quote is
      ""The idea that one species of organism is, unlike all the others, oriented not just toward its own increated prosperity but toward Truth, is as un-Darwinian as the idea that every human has a moral compass

    • @cruelsuit1
      @cruelsuit1 Před 8 lety +1

      +Wayne Ekeh Are you implying that because all organisms are ultimately selfish that humans are incapable of logic or scientific inquiry? Are you saying that Einstein's theories are intellectually equivalent to Kermit catching flies on his tongue?

    • @SomeRandomDude000000
      @SomeRandomDude000000 Před 8 lety +2

      cruelsuit1 "Are you implying that because all organisms are ultimately selfish that humans are incapable of logic or scientific inquiry? Are you saying that Einstein's theories are intellectually equivalent to Kermit catching flies on his tongue?"
      Im not
      Naturalism is

  • @joshsammartino8476
    @joshsammartino8476 Před měsícem

    I must be missing something. I find it plausible that on naturalistic evolution our cognitive faculties are unreliable. But I am not sure why this should motivate a person to abandon naturalism. If the argument is simply that we should prefer a worldview in which our cognitive faculties are reliable, it seems like a case of wishful thinking. If it is indeed the case that our cognitive faculties are unreliable then at best we have a case for agnosticism between naturalism and theism. How does this argument actually lead to theism?

  • @insidetrip101
    @insidetrip101 Před 11 lety

    I would have liked to ask him about Aristotle and the skeptic.
    It really bothers me that he separating action from belief. If you're choosing to act on a desire, and that desire is fulfilled, then I think its fair to say that your "belief" is true according to practical knowledge or prudence.
    Aristotle says in the ethics that it is the mark of a wise man to reach for the degree of certainty the subject matter will allow; isn't expecting absolute certainty devoid of prudence over reaching?

  • @GodinciOrg
    @GodinciOrg Před 9 lety +3

    This, to me, is philosophy in its most abstract form. Although it seems to make some good points, in my view, it remains too abstract and can certainly be felt in the Q & A where, according to my view, no good responses are formulated.

  • @itsjustameme
    @itsjustameme Před 9 lety +7

    Take for instance his argument that if our minds are evolved we have no reason to trust our reasoning and understanding of the world. I have seen Plantinga put forward this argument on several occasions and strut it around like it's a 18 hand horse on the last day of market.
    It seems to me as an atheist that Plantinga is actually right in his premises but that he neglects the final reality check before he draws his conclusion. We humans with our naturally evolved brains are in fact wrong about a great many things and only through the most rigorous testing can we discover what actually is true - and even then certain pig-headed people will still in spite of the evidence against their position go on to claim that their intuition about the universe is the right one - take the evolution debate for instance. So to me his argument is actually a much better argument against theism and for naturalism than for the conclusion he draws. If his proposition is that our brains would be prone to faulty reasoning and drawing fallacious conclusions is the watermark of it being naturalistically evolved he should stop and smell what he is shoveling for just a second. Because isn't that EXACTLY the world we actually live in right now?
    Plantinga actually admitted in his presentation that when we get to the edge of our understanding of the universe our perception and beliefs about the universe are in fact NOT reliable. And this is certainly true - but why in his worldview is this so? Shouldn't the world we would expect to see in his worldview that every single aspect of our understanding of the world be correct?
    So I guess my question is - isn't it the case that our perception of how things actually work is in fact severely and irredeemably flawed and only with the greatest of effort can we learn to master things like advanced mathematics, quantum physics, the theory of relativity, and so on?
    Isn't it the case that again and again have our intuition of how the world actually is been hopelessly and completely wrong and that we for instance have spent thousands of years believing that the earth was flat and at the centre of the universe, or that time was not relative?
    The insight that matter is mostly empty space, that simultaneity is a fiction, and that the universe is not fine tuned wrecks havoc on our common sense and still eludes even highly intelligent people to this day - not least of these Plantinga in the case of the last example.
    And we needn't even go to the edge of our understanding of the universe either - we make irrational conclusions and choices every single day. Why is it for instance that studies have shown that if a person is willing to help a little girl in Africa with 15$ to pay for her school and likewise he would be willing to donate 15$ to a boy in the same situation, that he on average would only give 10$ to help them both when asked to help them both en bloc? And if asked to help 100.000 children in Africa to go to school he would donate as little as 5$? Clearly evolution hasn't equipped us to make rational decisions under those particular circumstances.
    Hell - if our brains evolved naturalistically we might even find that millions of people believed in all sorts of silly religions that did not have the slightest shred of evidence going for them. Now wouldn't that be something.
    Perhaps if naturalism was true we might even find a philosopher who was willing to put forward the argument that if our brains were evolved we might reach wrong conclusions about how the universe worked and then go on to use this as an argument that our minds were designed. Oh what hubris that would be...
    ... I rest my case.

    • @ReallyWeirdThingsCom
      @ReallyWeirdThingsCom Před 9 lety +14

      itsjustameme That's a rather robust criticism of something other than Plantinga's argument. Perhaps you should devote a little more time and attention in trying to understand what, exactly, Plantinga's argument actually is? Because what you've written here doesn't address it at all.
      It appears that you're under the mistaken impression that Plantinga is saying that if the human brain arose through the processes of purely naturalistic evolution, it can be wrong about things. And, if it arose from design, it can't. That's most certainly NOT what he's saying.
      Plantinga's argument, in a nutshell, is that if one accepts naturalism and evolution as both being true, then one must also accept the presence of a logical defeater for that belief. Whereas, if you don't believe one, or the other, or both, to be true, then such a defeater is not necessary. I.e. - If you believe naturalism and evolution to be true, then you must accept that your very belief in those things (indeed, your belief in ANYTHING) might only be the product of naturalistic, evolutionary systems, and not, in any way, based on any sort of objective truth. And, you would have no way of reliably calculating any odds of probability for your belief -- because EVERYTHING you could use to calculate those odds are subject to the same defeater. So, the BEST you can reasonably do, when formulating any belief, if you hold naturalism and evolution to be true, is to say that any belief you hold has a 50/50 chance of being correct -- and, that includes your belief in naturalism and evolution.
      Get it? If you wish to remain logical AND believe that naturalism and evolution are both true, then you have to accept, as a logically necessary condition of those things being true, that you have no idea whether or not either naturalism or evolution are true. And, if you accept that you have no idea whether they are true, how can you logically hold a belief they are?

    • @ReallyWeirdThingsCom
      @ReallyWeirdThingsCom Před 9 lety +7

      No. That's not what he's saying at all. He's simply making an argument that a belief in both naturalism and evolution is irrational -- due to the fact that there's a necessary logical defeater built into the belief.
      That is, in no way, an appeal to ignorance.
      He's not saying we can't know anything. He's saying that anyone who believes naturalism and evolution to be true must believe we can't know anything. He's saying *IF* one accepts naturalism and evolution to be true, then one must also accept that they can't know if naturalism and evolution are true. And, if you can't know that naturalism and evolution is true, then it's irrational to believe that naturalism and evolution are true. By force of logic, *IF* naturalism and evolution are both true, the BEST you can rationally determine is that there's a 50/50 chance that they're both true. But, if you can't determine the reliability of both being true beyond 50/50 odds, it's irrational to believe they're both true. Because, logically, at a 50/50 chance, you have no idea whether they're true or not.
      Plantinga's argument is not an argument for, or against, naturalism and evolution actually being true or not. It doesn't address that. Nor does it address the likelihood of any possible alternative. Nor does it address any alternative belief. It's merely an argument about the rationality of a human belief in naturalism and evolution. With this argument, Plantinga argues that holding a belief in both naturalism and evolution being true is irrational -- nothing else.

    • @itsjustameme
      @itsjustameme Před 9 lety +2

      ReallyWeirdThings.Com
      Funny that - I would hold that the opposite is true. The only way you can ever know ANYTHING is if naturalism is true.
      If your god does exist you cannot know anything because in the next second your god might change anything and everything. If we adopt the theist worldview rules such as logic, the laws of nature, and morality might change at the whim of the god - it all becomes arbitrary and subjective according to gods subjective will and therefore the theist is in no position to have any opinion about these topics.
      In other words if your god does exist there is no way for us to know that murder, slavery or genocide will still be wrong tomorrow, or that the earth will continue in its orbit, or that time will run forwards, or that consequences follow actions. According to Christian doctrine God has changed these things in the past and may do so again at any moment and in such a world you could not know anything.
      The only way we can ever claim any kind of reasonable expectation about the world objectively is if naturalism and thereby atheism and evolution is correct. Only if we live in such a naturalistic worldview with an ordered universe does logic, morality, and the laws of nature even begin to make sense.
      The theist must in other words borrow from the worldview of an atheist/naturalist before he can even begin to reason about his god.

    • @ReallyWeirdThingsCom
      @ReallyWeirdThingsCom Před 9 lety +7

      itsjustameme
      You still appear to not understand the argument.
      First of all, Plantinga's argument has nothing to do with either naturalism or evolution actually being true or not. It has only to do with the rationality of believing that both naturalism and evolution (N+E) are true. He's saying that one may rationally believe that N is true, but not E. Or, one may rationally believe that E is true, but not N. Or, one may rationally believe that both are not true. Or, one may entirely not hold a belief, one way or the other, in the truth of either one, or both, at all. But, one may not *rationally* believe that both are true. If you believe both are true, you are, necessarily, being irrational. Because, doing so gives rise to a necessary logical defeater. That is to say, to believe that both are true, logically, is to believe that you can't reliably believe that both are true. And, how can one rationally believe in something that they believe they can't reliably believe in? It's logically absurd.
      You're correct, however, in so far that *IF* a non-naturalistic world is true, then we *might* very well not be able to know anything with confidence. But, that isn't logically self-defeating. It is not irrational to believe that ours is a non-naturalistic world AND believe that we can know things with confidence. It may not be correct in actuality, but it's not irrational. However, believing that N+E is true, is logically self-defeating. It is an inherently irrational belief.
      - If one believes N is true, but not E, then one may rationally believe that we exist in a naturalistic world where there is no process developing us to mistake falsehoods for truth if its advantageous enough to do so. It may not be a correct belief, but it's not necessarily an irrational one.
      - If one believes E is true, but not N, then one may rationally believe that, say, there's a will at work -- something like a god -- that arranges for our ability to know truth with confidence, despite evolutionary processes which value survival over truth recognition. Again, it may not be a correct belief, but it's not necessarily irrational.
      - But, if one believes N+E to be true, one must accept that we are slaves to evolutionary processes, and we can't know if anything we believe to be true is actually false and we're being tricked into believing it as true because it's evolutionarily advantageous to do so. And, this includes our belief regarding N+E being true. I.e. - If I accept that N+E is true, then I must accept that my belief in N+E being true is unreliable, due to the fact I can't know if my belief is founded upon any objective truth, or if it's just evolutionarily advantageous enough that I'm being programmed to believe it as true when it's actually false. So, the belief that N+E is true has a logical defeater built into it. The belief that N+E is true, itself, defeats the reliability of the belief that N+E is true. So, the belief that N+E is true is necessarily irrational. Rejecting either N, or E, or both, gets you out of that necessary irrationality. That doesn't mean that your belief is true, or not, it just means that it's possible to hold it and remain rational.
      So, a person who believes N is true, but not E. Or, one who believes E is true, but not N. Or, one who believes neither N or E is true, *may* hold their belief rationally -- entirely regardless of whether or not they're actually correct in their belief. But, a person who believes N+E is true *must* hold their belief irrationally -- again, entirely regardless of whether or not they're actually correct.

    • @ReallyWeirdThingsCom
      @ReallyWeirdThingsCom Před 9 lety +2

      *****
      If it's evolutionarily advantageous enough for you to believe a falsehood to be true, evolution may select for that trait. Evolution may have developed you to accept any given falsehood as being true, or any given truth as being false, no matter what. Since this possibility exists, in an entirely naturalistic world, one can never know how reliable any belief in truth or falsity actually is. Does 2+2=4? Or, has evolution programmed you to be convinced that 2+2=4 no matter what evidence is presented to you to the contrary? If you believe that naturalism and evolution (N+E) is true, then you must believe this to be a possibility. But, you must believe this to be a possibility with EVERYTHING you believe. So, this belief also extends to your belief that N+E is true. Therefore, the belief that N+E is true has a logical defeater built into it, and is therefore an irrational belief. To believe that N+E is true is to believe that you can't reliably believe that N+E is true. If you believe that you can reliably believe that N+E is true, then you don't actually believe that N+E is true. And, that's a logical absurdity.
      He's not saying that, in actuality, evolution is incompatible with naturalism. He's saying that the belief that both are true can not be held rationally. We might live in a world where both are actually true. But, if we do, we can't reliably know it with any reasonable degree of confidence. So, even if N+E is actually true, to believe it is is irrational. If N+E is actually true, then, to remain rational, we must be satisfied to either believe it's not and be incorrect. Or, we must remain neutral to the question and accept that we just can't know. Whether N+E is actually true, or not, it is, by force of logic, irrational to believe that N+E is actually true. It may not be incorrect, but it can't be a rationally held belief.
      IF you're rational AND you believe that N+E is true, THEN you must accept that you can't reliably know if N+E is true. But, if you're rational, how can you believe something that you believe can not reliably be believed? You can't. You can't believe that and remain rational. Regardless of whether or not N+E is actually true, you can either believe N+E is true, OR you can be rational, but you can't be both. Understand? The very belief that N+E is true, if it is believed, demands that your belief in N+E being true is necessarily unreliable. Therefore, it has a built-in defeater for the belief. And to hold to a belief that defeats itself is not rational.

  • @jfvirey
    @jfvirey Před 6 lety

    The belief that 7+5=12 may not have significant behavioural consequences, but the abillity to count which it presupposes does. We know crows and pigeons for instance can count. This is an evolutionarily deep cognitive ability which can be very helpful in any conflict situation ("They're seven against our five"), or to keep track of group members ("one of us is missing"), or a host of other situations ("Have all the predators come out of the cave?") Many other such abilities (such as keeping track of time and seasons, inferring fire from smoke or rain from clouds, detecting mood changes in conspecifics, etc.) would have great survival value dependent on their reliability.

    • @Raiddd__
      @Raiddd__ Před 6 měsíci

      Again, as plantinga said in the q&a section, you are presupposing that the content of beliefs can cause behavior on naturalism and evolution, which while at least seemingly possible is not the most likely relation of belief content to behavior given naturalism and evolution. But even GIVEN that relation being in fact how it works, your comment wouldnt amount to much. Because maybe so, maybe what youre saying about these certain beliefs being useful is true. That in no way indicates whatsoever that these beliefs are actually true beliefs. They could very well simply be adaptive and useful FALSE beliefs, given naturalism and evolution.

    • @AsixA6
      @AsixA6 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Raiddd__ False. Beliefs inform actions.

    • @AsixA6
      @AsixA6 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Raiddd__ Which is more beneficial to survival, reliable or unreliable cognitive faculties? Get a grip. Plantinga’s argument is asinine.

  • @Pharaoh126
    @Pharaoh126 Před měsícem

    I don’t think anyone understands his argument. I’ve heard it a few times and still struggle with it. Doesn’t pay off to be rude/dismissive when you don’t even understand, just makes you look like an idiot

  • @undefeateddebater9438
    @undefeateddebater9438 Před 4 lety +5

    It's a fact, not an opinion, that Plantinga's argument was long ago refuted, Sober's refutation is from 1997.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +1

      Sober did not "refute" anything. He simply offered his "objections".
      The EAAN is alive (and well alive).

    • @undefeateddebater9438
      @undefeateddebater9438 Před 4 lety +4

      @@martam4142 Substantiate yourself. Provide evidence for what you assert and cite Sober's article. Thank you.

    • @VACatholic
      @VACatholic Před 4 lety +1

      @@undefeateddebater9438 Burden of proof is on you, child.

    • @undefeateddebater9438
      @undefeateddebater9438 Před 4 lety +3

      @@VACatholic It's on anyone who makes unsubstantiated claims (like you just did), I provided one of the philosophers who have refuted Plantinga just in case you're interested in fact checking me.

    • @VACatholic
      @VACatholic Před 4 lety +1

      @@undefeateddebater9438 Your appeal to authority is duly noted and rejected as stupid. Do you have any other arguments?

  • @terryharris516
    @terryharris516 Před 9 lety +4

    He is so rational and reasonable,yet he is speaking to people that will not accept any raionale.or reason but they're own cherished notions of reason or rationality,I.E.There is no God.God presupposes that we were Created rational and reasonable,Throw out God and There is no ration and reason,Just people talking about ration and reason that don't believe in ration or reason.So like the Bible says,its that they refuse to believe.

  • @phillipbrandel7932
    @phillipbrandel7932 Před 3 lety

    I don't think the second possibility is a very good argument either. The brain functions as an intermediary between the sense organs and the muscles-information about the environment enters the sense organs (eyes, ears, etc.) travels through sense nerves to the brain, and then the brain processes the nerve signals it receives and converts it into different signals it sends through the motor nerves, causing certain muscles to contract or relax, making the organism to move in a certain way. Essentially, the brain takes information about its environment and turns it into bodily movements in a way determined by its structure. We also know that experience of the world can cause humans to change their behaviors, implying the structure of their brains can change in response to the sensory information they have previously received about the world. For example, the first time a person encounters fire, they may touch it out of curiosity and get burned. After this experience, when they encounter fire again, they will not touch it, and will feel compelled to avoid it. The same sensory input that first caused them to extend their arm into the fire now does not cause them to move their arm at all; the brain is translating the same environmental input into a different behavioral output, meaning its structure was likely altered by their first encounter with fire. We can call this change in structure 'belief,' or at least the neurophysiological aspect of belief. In this view of belief, beliefs about the world will (1) affect human behavior by virtue of their neurophysiological structure, and (2) will tend reflect the nature of the actual external world. The second property is likely true because brains whose structure is reflective of the external world and also tends to become more reflective of it as it experiences it will be more favored by natural selection.

    • @phillipbrandel7932
      @phillipbrandel7932 Před 3 lety

      "there's no particular probability at all that it [natural selection] would be modifying their [beliefs'] contents as well in the direction of greater truth or greater reliability on the part of these structures that produce these beliefs" (37:46). I don't know why he thinks this. Under the naturalist framework he's criticizing, the 'truth' of a belief is most obviously understood as a kind of correspondence between the structures that produce beliefs and the actual nature of the external world. That is, the set of all possible beliefs can be understood as a set of possible brain structures, and the set of true beliefs can be understood as the output of a certain one-to-one function which takes states of the external world and maps each of them to a unique corresponding brain structure such that in its output space information about the external world relevant to survival would be preserved. Because meaningful information about the external world is relevant to the brain's ability to turn environmental inputs into evolutionarily-preferential behavior, there would be every reason to expect that the brain would evolve to generate beliefs which corresponded to the actual state of the external world by means of such a function.

    • @Raiddd__
      @Raiddd__ Před 6 měsíci

      @@phillipbrandel7932 So? Even supposing everything youre saying is entailed by the naturalist position (which to say is a stretch would be an understatement since what you seem to be describing is a sort of reductive physicalism with respect to beliefs and brain states, one of the lesser popular of the many possible positions), even if there were unique corresponding brain structures for each external stimuli, what says that that particular corresponding brain structure (which according to you literally just IS the belief) has to be the "true" belief? Its being fixed (or mapped as you say) by one particular external state of the world certainly doesnt mean that its being fixed as a true belief. All of plantingas examples of the Lion chasing paul but paul believing its actually a fluffy kitten that he must evade for fun or whatever etc would all still apply. The exact same external world state is present in every single example, yet in every example a different mistaken belief is held about the world state. Even if the world state fixes the specific brain structure, as long as that brain structure is evolutionarily beneficial, it doesnt matter what its truth value actually is; it could be that the tiger is a holographic illusion that is the signal of the start of a 1500 meter race. Either way precisley the same behavior is exhibited- running.

    • @AsixA6
      @AsixA6 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Raiddd__Reality that’s ‘who’.

  • @MCulpa
    @MCulpa Před 11 lety

    I liked that that question turned into a discussion; awesome!

  • @osmosis321
    @osmosis321 Před rokem +3

    I don't get why Plantinga has fanbois, this just isn't a good argument. Nor is the MOA.

  • @championdebater7088
    @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +9

    "If you know anything about evolution, the 'evolutionary argument against naturalism' is a nonstarter"
    -Jerry Coyne

    • @blindlemon9
      @blindlemon9 Před 4 lety +4

      OK...You just provided an assertion, with no argument behind it. Who cares about Coyne’s conclusion by itself? You need to tell us why every such argument is a nonstarter. Otherwise, it’s just an appeal to authority argument, which is not a reasoned argument at all.

    • @championdebater7088
      @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +3

      @@blindlemon9 In another thread somebody quoted Coyne mistakenly thinking it somehow supported their defense of Plantinga. I provide the quote here to show he's no fan. He's a biologist who has pointed out some of Plantinga's errors regarding evolution. Also, appeals to authority are not always fallacious.

    • @jasminejacob1870
      @jasminejacob1870 Před 3 lety +1

      @@blindlemon9 Yup, appeals to authority is fallacious when the authority is not an expert in the field. If the topic is molecular biology, then appealing to a molecular biologist is not fallacious; appealing to a marine engineer is fallacious.

    • @aqilshamil9633
      @aqilshamil9633 Před 2 lety

      @@championdebater7088 Coyne needs to realize Darwinian Evolutionism is a dead theory

    • @CesarClouds
      @CesarClouds Před rokem

      @@aqilshamil9633 It's one of the greatest scientific theories ever.

  • @phillipbrandel7932
    @phillipbrandel7932 Před 3 lety

    About his first possibility (around 30:00): human beliefs are observably not epiphenomenal regarding human behavior (nor natural selection, inasmuch as behavior is visible to selective processes, which it is almost entirely). Ask "are people's behaviors influenced by the beliefs they have about the world?" The answer is of course yes. For example, if a person believes a certain kind of berry is poisonous, they will avoid eating it even if they get very hungry, whereas they likely would eat it if they were hungry and had no knowledge about it, and therefore no belief. This is also an example of evolution selecting for 'truth producing cognition.' Past human beings that did not generate true beliefs about the world were very possibly less likely to survive.

    • @tobieaina
      @tobieaina Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, but there is a whole host of other beliefs about a berry that would create the same response. Evolution is ordered to survival not truth. What is truth in a naturalistic world anyway?

  • @jonathanincharmwood
    @jonathanincharmwood Před 11 lety +2

    I don't think the questioners understood the talk.

  • @championdebater7088
    @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +5

    "But if the bar for rational belief is lowered to mere logical possibility, and the demand for positive evidence dropped, then no holds are barred"
    -Maarten Boudry
    This is a fact not an opinion. It's a reason why Plantinga's outdated medieval scholastic reasoning, a prime example being his EAAN, has had little impact within analytic philosophy (not to mention it's been refuted).

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety

      Sorry buddy, it is not a 'fact'. You saying it is a 'fact' won't convince anyone.
      Where is Alvin Plantinga wrong?

    • @championdebater7088
      @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +2

      @@martam4142 So dropping evidence in favor of mere logical possibility is not lowering the bar? Why not? Where's your argument?

  • @championdebater7088
    @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +5

    " EAAN is not a suitable method. In general, EAAN is a kind of arguments through artificial paradox"
    - Chaohui Zhuang

    • @VACatholic
      @VACatholic Před 4 lety +1

      What does this argument from authority matter at all?

    • @championdebater7088
      @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +2

      @@VACatholic What argument? Is English your primary language? I've been reading some of your comments and you don't seem to comprehend what you're replying to. Please inform yourself accordingly.

    • @VACatholic
      @VACatholic Před 4 lety

      @@championdebater7088 You're a bot.

    • @championdebater7088
      @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +1

      @@VACatholic That's not an argument. Please inform yourself accordingly.

    • @VACatholic
      @VACatholic Před 4 lety +1

      @@championdebater7088 that's not an argument. Please inform yourself accordingly.

  • @thethikboy
    @thethikboy Před 11 lety

    What does fame have to do with science?

  • @theinr2
    @theinr2 Před 9 lety +1

    It seems to mean that Plantinga presents a view of naturalism that is too simple. Maybe one of you can help me out here, because I was excited to see another respected philosopher positing this view; mainly because I don't think I fully grasped this view when I saw it for the first time. In Thomas Nagel's Mind and Cosmos, he mentions something like this view, but I couldn't really make any sense of it without his addition that our intelligibility of the universe is hugely coincident, given that "evolution has no ability to guide our reasoning to have complete general validity rather than mere local utility." But that doesn't seem like as strong as an argument as Plantinga is making; and also doesn't have much bite (in my mind), as truths from local utility could conceivably be brought to have impact on our understanding and creation of physics.
    Plantinga's naturalism doesn't seem like a system of belief to me, but just a refutation of God, adding nothing but chaos in it's place. Does Plantinga's argument also refute E & N + scientific realism; the idea that there is an objective world, that our senses can interact with in some way, and that one of science's aims is to gather true representations of this world from our senses? Maybe Plantinga would say that scientific realism is just another belief that is really only guided by faith, with no real backing, and is also defeated? We can diagram how the visual system works. Electromagnetic waves hit the retina, a signal cascade starts within the affected cells, then send their respective effects eventually all the way to the occipital lobe. I'm only interested in a non-epiphenominal theory of mind/brain that gives the mind a causal role and retains free-will. Plantinga might say that when we add meaning to what those electromagnetic waves were, and believe that it is representative of what is in an objective world, then we are making our system theory-laden on prior belief that is still unfounded.
    Perhaps I'm only proving Plantinga's point, and maybe that's helpful to some of you. My real problem is that it makes more sense for me to say that at least our perceptual experiences are usually reliable, because when they (or their rudimentary beginnings) appeared by happenstance of genetic mutation they conferred a new ability to us. First, the ability to sense light, then the ability to discriminate boundaries, eventually to see a tiger hiding behind a bush. It might be important that the first ancestor that perceived light probably had no conscious experience. Plantinga aims at all the unsolved mind/body problems, and say that because we continue with science despite not knowing for sure that other minds exist or that our senses interact with an object, real world, then our theories under that science can be overturned. He seems to say that it is conceivable that our evolutionary abilities are wrong, so they must be wrong. To me it seems more likely that our abilities are right, because having a true discriminatory faculty that could pick our a tiger behind a bush would be of local utility; if our mind has causal powers. Is Plantinga's argument just of conceivability? Does he go into more detail in his latest book about scientific realism or a more system-wide naturalistic belief?

  • @championdebater7088
    @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +5

    "I’ve read some of Plantinga’s books and articles and haven’t been terribly impressed"
    -Jerry Coyne

    • @felixfourcolor
      @felixfourcolor Před 2 lety

      The best you can do is quote other philosophers? I don't care what others think. What do you think?

    • @asix9178
      @asix9178 Před rokem +2

      @@felixfourcolor If you don’t care what others think, why are you asking what another thinks? 🤪😜

    • @CesarClouds
      @CesarClouds Před rokem

      @@felixfourcolor Jerry Coyne is a scientist.

  • @snuzebuster
    @snuzebuster Před 8 lety +4

    Plantinga thinks he is so clever with his Paul and the Tiger analogies, when in fact they are such silly oversimplifications that a child ought to be able to see through them. Sure, we can imagine a person with cognitive faculties so faulty that they thought Tigers were pussy cats and the best way to pet them was to run away, and they might survive in that situation, but I guarantee, in the next or next situation, some time soon, those faulty faculties are going to fail him.
    Of course, it does make sense to think that our faculties on Naturalism would become unreliable as we move away from the kind of mundane information gathering and processing that is needed for survival. And that in fact is what we see, which is what we should expect on naturalism, but not super naturalism. Heck, Plantinga himself thinks we can somehow get transcendent knowledge from some divine inner sense. Where is the evidence for that?
    Plantinga's argument does also not take into account a very important fact, and that is human knowledge is not the random musings of moronic savages it is the cumulative work of thousands of years of the endeavor of some of the greatest minds the world has known. Once the printing press was invented learning could be recorded and dispersed widely. At some point we developed the scientific, which is a method of correcting for some of the distortions that our evolved cognitive faculties do have. One of the pillars of the method is naturalism, admittedly this is methodological naturalism not metaphysical naturalism, but the latter is the preferred system of most of the best educated people in the world today.
    Sorry, I don't find Plantinga's EAAN adds anything to my doubts about the superiority of naturalism to supernaturalism.

  • @benaberry
    @benaberry Před 11 lety

    Well true in the fact that evolution is fact but not everyone believes in it. It depends on the definition of belief.

  • @frankiemiller5364
    @frankiemiller5364 Před 22 dny

    If to be best apt to survive, would unreasonably unreliable cognitive perceptual faculties be selected?
    It seems that reasonably reliable faculties would be evolutionarily selected for on naturalism.
    Eyes which incorrectly perceive distance relative to position would fail to detect the coming cliff’s edge and leave the life form tumbling to extinction.
    It does not seem contradictory to posit that evolution would produce creatures who can reasonably rely on their faculties.
    Even stated, how could we trust our faculties to distinguish between true and false supernatural god beliefs?
    Unless I’m missing something, in at least some way, Plantinga’s contention either doesn’t hold water or destroys theistic belief along with everything else.

  • @redpillpusher
    @redpillpusher Před 5 lety +3

    I've always wondered why theists loved referencing AP and after listening (with much difficulty). I realized that he was the source of many of the fallacious arguments I've heard over the years. This is a great talk to listen to if you're of the mindset of getting into the head of many religious apologists and versing yourself of the pitfalls of this line of reasoning. so, in a way, "useful".

    • @Mike-qn5et
      @Mike-qn5et Před 5 lety

      Is that true?

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety

      Neurochemicals randomly spouting non-sense, you uneducated p.o.crap.

  • @undefeateddebater9438
    @undefeateddebater9438 Před 4 lety +7

    "Plantinga *_assumes_* that evolutionary naturalist have no basis for deciding what we think about _R_ , other than the proposition _E&N_ itself. This crucial *_assumption_* is *_never_* defended".
    -Ellliot Sober
    -Branden Fitelson
    We would like to know your defense Plantinga.
    "Plantinga must show that _E&N_ not only defeats _R_ but also defeats the claim that 'at least a non-negligible minority of our beliefs are true"
    -Elliot Sober
    -Branden Fitelson
    We're waiting Plantinga.
    "he *_never_* explains how they are relevant to establishing that _E&N_ defeats _R_ ".
    -Elliot Sober
    -Branden Fitelson
    His "defeaters" defeated nothing. His argument is refuted.
    (all emphasis mine)

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +1

      No point in replying to you since you keep editting and editting the post.
      What a pointless and silly tactic.
      Show your argument and defend it.
      Quote mining = waste of time.
      The EEAN has certainly hit a nerve.
      Checkmate naturalists. Your superstition is dying.

    • @undefeateddebater9438
      @undefeateddebater9438 Před 4 lety +6

      @@martam4142 It's a different post. Plantinga has been refuted more than once, no need to beat a dead horse.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety

      @@undefeateddebater9438 No sweetheart. The EEAN stands, untouched.
      Where did Plantinga went "wrong"?

    • @undefeateddebater9438
      @undefeateddebater9438 Před 4 lety +3

      @@martam4142 Read my OP.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety

      @@undefeateddebater9438 Quote mining, boy.
      Develop an ARGUMENT, premises and conclusion.
      Thank you.

  • @dr.jimnikol1020
    @dr.jimnikol1020 Před 8 lety

    Materialists do not see humans as objects, rather as subjects.

  • @Rayvvvone
    @Rayvvvone Před 9 lety +1

    is Plantinga seriously using this argument anymore?

  • @championdebater7088
    @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +7

    "Plantinga continues to conveniently revise the EAAN in response to his critics"
    -Troy Cross
    Reed College
    Department of Philosophy
    If it's such a solid argument why keep revising it? Obviously, it keeps getting refuted so Plantinga keeps changing it.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +1

      And again, nothing of substance. The EEAN stands, show me where Plantinga is wrong and I'll drop it.
      Meanwhile:
      Opinions are NOT arguments.
      Losers have opinions, NOT arguments.

    • @championdebater7088
      @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +2

      @@martam4142 Cross gave no opinion, it's a fact Plantinga has continually revised his argument do to refutations.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety

      @@championdebater7088 Again, statements with no proof = nothing.
      Show us what you have.
      We are waiting.

    • @championdebater7088
      @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +2

      @@martam4142 The proof it's a fact Plantinga has revised his argument. Do you have proof to the contrary? Please present it.

    • @spitfiremase
      @spitfiremase Před 4 lety

      @@championdebater7088 what's wrong with revising an argument if a flaw is pointed out?

  • @allenwang3331
    @allenwang3331 Před 6 lety +3

    To summarize his argument:
    (a) Naturalistic evolution cannot give rise to reliable reasoning ability
    (b) Is E and N are both true, we are likely delusional by (a), so argument for E and N (or any argument at all) is likely wrong.
    First, I point out that (b) is just a simple logic, and (a) is topic in evolutionary psychology/cognitive science. So nothing is uniquely insightful here.
    His arguments for (a) is well within the domain of cognitive science, and they would not be accepted. Specifically, his claim that wrong beliefs can give rise to correct behaviour is only true in limited context like the tiger example. An organism has to do way more than running away from a tiger to survive, and complex behaviours require a coherency in reasoning - that's what natural selection enforces.
    There's a ton of literature on the topic from modern neuroscience and cogsci, and he does not even come close in addressing them. He just makes a hand-wavy claim with limited knowledge. Wrong way to apply philosophical thinking

    • @Mrlittlegoose
      @Mrlittlegoose Před 6 lety +1

      This is not meant as a critique, just a clarification. It seems to me that your reconstruction of the argument does not represent what Plantinga offered. His argument is more like this (where R stands for the reliability of our cognitive faculties to produce true beliefs):
      1) The probability of R on N&E is low or inscrutable.
      2) Anyone who accepts N&E and (1) has a defeater for R.
      3) Anyone who has a defeater for R has a defeater for all their beliefs.
      One relevant difference between (1-3) and your formulation of (a-b) is that (1-3) does not need to show that N&E cannot result in R. It only needs to show that the probability of R is low or inscrutable. The second premise does not need to entail that we are delusional beings, that R is false, or even that the probability of R is low. All it requires is that the probability of R is low or inscrutable.
      But like I say, this was only meant as a clarification. Your comments about cognitive science can still defeat (1-3). I don’t know anything about the literature. Do most cognitive scientists/neorscientists hold that mental states (beliefs) cause brain states? I would have thought the majority view for naturalists was either that mental states don’t exist or mental states are fixed by brain states.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +1

      Watch the video again. And pay attention.

  • @jjhot254
    @jjhot254 Před 11 lety

    because he is a christian apologist, and he tells the truth

  • @timrappl7186
    @timrappl7186 Před 9 lety +1

    for "the definite discrimination required", see George Holmes Howison's "The Limits of Evolution, and other essays, illustrating the metaphysical theory of personal idealism" ("free" via google books).

  • @snakeplissken512
    @snakeplissken512 Před 4 lety +5

    There's no problem at all being demonstrated in evolution being coupled with naturalism, he simply ASSUMED one to try and refute naturalism. He failed to refute it.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +2

      Your opinion is not an argument.

    • @snakeplissken512
      @snakeplissken512 Před 4 lety +6

      @@martam4142 When did I say it was? I correctly pointed out Plantinga ASSUMED a problem so his argument fails.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +1

      @@snakeplissken512 Again, your opinion does not refute Plantinga. The EEAN stands.
      Show your argument or shut up.

    • @snakeplissken512
      @snakeplissken512 Před 4 lety +3

      @@martam4142 When did I say my opinion refutes him? I simply stated a fact.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +1

      @@snakeplissken512 You stated the fact that you are a bullshitter. MTV generation, Sweet Lord. You can not refute the EEAN, so please stop wasting your time (and mine).

  • @whatsinaname691
    @whatsinaname691 Před 2 lety +3

    Kinda embarrassing that my sister goes to this school. Hope that it’s gotten better, and thankfully she isn’t in the philosophy department. (A waste of a beautiful building)

  • @jaymesmckenzie5592
    @jaymesmckenzie5592 Před 9 lety +1

    Naturalists: Please explain how information can be explained by physics and chemistry e.g. explain the semiotics of "ILOVEYOU" written on a piece of paper in the terms of the chemistry and physics of the paper and ink?

    • @Rayvvvone
      @Rayvvvone Před 9 lety

      "Naturalists: Please explain how information can be explained by physics and chemistry e.g."
      - But just before we address your malformed question, why do you think the argument from ignorance is going to help your case?

    • @jaymesmckenzie5592
      @jaymesmckenzie5592 Před 9 lety

      Rayvvvone What case? It's a question ..just answer the "malformed question" without using agency as an explanation.

    • @Rayvvvone
      @Rayvvvone Před 9 lety

      Jaymes McKenzie have you stopped beating your wife is the same kind of thing..
      Please explain something nobody can explain OR my position is proved.. the argument from ignorance is useless.
      Your question is irrelevant. Please explain how you believe in a god with no evidence for it.
      Please explain why you resort to mental games instead of offering any evidence for what you believe in.
      Please explain why you think asking annoying questions like a 4 year old should REPLACE evidence for your fantasy.
      WITHOUT USING AGENCY.. so if I can't think of something you think you PROVED AGENCY OR ANYTHING ELSE?
      this is just retarded.

    • @jaymesmckenzie5592
      @jaymesmckenzie5592 Před 9 lety

      Rayvvvone Whoa, chill out bro... turn off the caps lock and relax, lol.
      "Please explain something nobody can explain OR my position is proved.. the argument from ignorance is useless." Cool, what argument did I make?
      "Your question is irrelevant." To you perhaps.
      "have you stopped beating your wife is the same kind of thing.." I don't even know how to take this, lol.
      "Please explain why you resort to mental games instead of offering any evidence for what you believe in." Again, why do I need to insert evidence into a question? And I'm sorry this question is stressing you out so much.
      "Please explain why you think asking annoying questions like a 4 year old should REPLACE evidence for your fantasy." You are beating a dead horse, this is the third time you have alluded to there needing to be evidence presented upon asking a question. Why did you scream "replace" at me though? And the expression "evidence for you fantasy" is sort of a contradiction since fantasies are subjective in nature,
      "WITHOUT USING AGENCY.. so if I can't think of something you think you PROVED AGENCY OR ANYTHING ELSE?" This is hard to read when you are yelling, jk, lol. No I don't think a question in general can prove something but rather it is meant to make us all think; or as you stated be a "mind game" like Lumosity.com or something, lol. Look you can answer the question or ignore it but I don't see how this long post of yours is relevant. Have a great day!

    • @Samsgarden
      @Samsgarden Před 9 lety +1

      Jaymes McKenzie
      Precisely. Science is descriptive, not explanatory.

  • @AMomentOfClarity2011
    @AMomentOfClarity2011 Před 11 lety

    The point he makes in 59 about religion shows what I mean by the shell game of true.
    Religion is not a single thing, but a label for a who slew of practices and beliefs, all with different origins and purposes. Religions are false beliefs if taken as a whole, from an objective viewpoint, but TRUE (all of them) in regard to the benefits of tribalism and certain dogma that they provide to early man in barbaric societies. Much like eating sweets is bad for us now but GOOD for us in the past.

  • @snakeplissken512
    @snakeplissken512 Před 4 lety +3

    This argument has been refuted several times by professional philosophers.

    • @spitfiremase
      @spitfiremase Před 4 lety

      This is a 7 year old video. And I'm pretty sure veritas forum posts videos way older than that sometimes.
      And he is a professional philosopher. He probably knows counter arguments to his stuff very well.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety

      @@spitfiremase Yes he knows. There is this book: "Naturalism Defeated"?
      "In this, the first book to address the ongoing debate, Plantinga presents his influential thesis and responds to critiques by distinguished philosophers from a variety of subfields. Plantinga's argument is aimed at metaphysical naturalism or roughly the view that no supernatural beings exist".
      www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=www.amazon.es/Naturalism-Defeated-Plantingas-Evolutionary-Argument/dp/0801487633&ved=2ahUKEwi4l-Cu4O_nAhVGrxoKHY0VC9UQFjACegQIARAB&usg=AOvVaw0fbZhrg9fvwTDPszhugaBP&cshid=1582738740076

    • @snakeplissken512
      @snakeplissken512 Před 4 lety +3

      @@spitfiremase He hasn't made many counter arguments only revisions of which the latest was in 2011. That was refuted by Stephen Law and Plantinga has not responded.

    • @joshheter1517
      @joshheter1517 Před 3 lety

      This argument has been *responded to* several times by professional philosophers. It’s (at best) a matter of debate whether or not it has been “refuted”.
      But thanks for weighing in, Snake.

  • @championdebater7088
    @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +5

    "Naturalism emerges unscathed from Plantinga’s attack, and he has done nothing that comes even close of averting the conflict between science and religion".
    - Maarten Boudry

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +2

      Blah blah. Mere assertions.
      Address the argument or go home.
      Quotes are not reasons.
      EEAN = Naturalism + Evolution 》Irrational belief.

    • @championdebater7088
      @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +4

      @@martam4142 Plantinga has been refuted that's why he had to revise his argument.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety

      @@championdebater7088 Naturalism is dead. Naturalism can not account for intentionatily, consciousness, free will and the self.

    • @championdebater7088
      @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +2

      @@martam4142 Naturalism, methodological, underpins all of science and your contention it cannot account for some things is fallacious: argument from ignorance.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety

      @@championdebater7088 Very bad grammar. What do you mean? It is not clear what you are trying to say.
      Please elaborate.
      Thank you.

  • @T12J7
    @T12J7 Před 11 lety

    Even when I'm a christian, I'm not sure is his argument valid. To me it seems that in evolution, beliefs can have positive effect on survival, even if they are false, but I'm not entirely sure, can illogical brain have benefit on survival, in a competition with logical brain.

  • @benaberry
    @benaberry Před 11 lety

    By stating "Theist" you mean one who believes in god, how is that not presupposing something?

  • @championdebater7088
    @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +6

    His argument has had zero impact within philosophy and science. He got refuted so he had to revise his argument and then got refuted - once again - and revised even more. If his argument is so "solid" why does he change it when it gets refuted?

    • @RSCa3218
      @RSCa3218 Před 4 lety

      First time being exposed to the scientific process?

    • @championdebater7088
      @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +4

      @@RSCa3218 Plantinga simply doesn't understand evolutionary theory.

    • @RSCa3218
      @RSCa3218 Před 4 lety

      @@championdebater7088 and?

    • @championdebater7088
      @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +3

      @@RSCa3218 And his argument fails.

    • @RSCa3218
      @RSCa3218 Před 4 lety

      @@championdebater7088 that is the nature of the scientific method. Hence my asking you if this was your first time witnessing it.

  • @championdebater7088
    @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +6

    "Plantinga’s effort to stave off the conflict between theism and evolution is a failure. Either he is buying into creationist fantasies that have been put to rest long ago, or he is hammering on the excessively weak claim that it is logically and metaphysically possible that, all evidence to the contrary, evolution unfolds under supernatural guidance."
    - Maarten Boudry
    Philosopher

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +2

      Mere opinions. They do not look like an argument... Wait! They are not.
      The EAAN is exquisite in its ellegance and very powerful.
      Atheists, you have been dealt a mortal blow.

    • @championdebater7088
      @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +5

      @@martam4142 Please explain why you assume it's an opinion and provide evidence disputing anything that Boudry stated. Thank you.

    • @VACatholic
      @VACatholic Před 4 lety +1

      @@championdebater7088 Because there's no argument there. It's just an opinion about someone else's argument, that is incredibly derogatory and shows a lack of respect and intellect.
      Evolution doesn't explain the origin of life. So while evolution might unfold without supernatural guidance, you're going to have to explain how it got started under your naturalist world view. To which you will say "I don't know". At which point, you have a theory that lives in space without any grounding in anything.
      It'd be quite funny to watch if it wasn't so dangerously arrogant.

    • @championdebater7088
      @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +2

      @@VACatholic No argument needed to refute was has already been refuted. Please inform yourself accordingly.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety

      @@VACatholic Hehe. Thank you. According to naturalists, "no-thing" has properties and "no-thing" = the Universe.
      Materialism has been dealt fatal blows, the EEAN is a thorn on their side :)

  • @John_May.
    @John_May. Před 8 lety +2

    Wow, this is the guy who William Lane Craig speaks so highly of? They deserve each other.

    • @richardjohnson6140
      @richardjohnson6140 Před 8 lety +2

      +John May yeah I'm sure you have a lot of insight

    • @John_May.
      @John_May. Před 8 lety

      Good one!

    • @Mrlittlegoose
      @Mrlittlegoose Před 8 lety

      +John May Craig and about every philosopher of religion since the 60s including atheistic ones like Mackie.

    • @osmosis321
      @osmosis321 Před 7 lety

      "philosopher of religion"
      That right there pretty much means he's full of hot air.

    • @PhoenixMarco5
      @PhoenixMarco5 Před 7 lety +4

      Osmosis You can add metaphysicians and epistemologists to that list. People who question Plantinga's credential should really consider the fact that the man is a highly regarded philosophers respected by his peers, who taught graduate students at Notre Dame for over twenty years, and who made notable contributions to the field of metaphysics, epistemology, and the philosophy of religion. If you think his argument is that bad, then instead of attacking his character, try to refute it.

  • @moralgamer
    @moralgamer Před 11 lety

    Philosophy is a search for truth. Religions often find their truth by a deity. The goal is the same, however the methods differ.
    No one possesses all knowledge/truth. Truth is found through evidence. Evidence (for an individual) is found through experience. Many claim to have experienced God. Is it reasonable to say there may be a deity? It is reasonable to seek to uncover the nature of this deity?
    If not, what reasonable explanation is there to remain ignorant toward their experience?

  • @championdebater7088
    @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +6

    "Funnily, he doesn't respond to my review of his own book"
    -Maarten Boudry
    Philosopher
    (Twitter feed)
    Hmmm, I wonder why?

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +3

      Because Plantinga has better things to do?
      And by the way, aheists' egos are "mere chemical illusions". Normal people do not care about nobodies.

    • @championdebater7088
      @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +5

      @@martam4142 Better things to do like ignoring he got refuted. Got it.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +1

      @@championdebater7088 Got what, silly boy? The EEAN is alive and it has become one of the last nails on the coffin of naturalism.

    • @championdebater7088
      @championdebater7088 Před 4 lety +2

      @@martam4142 Methodological naturalism still underpins science and Plantinga's argument had zero effect. Natural phenomena is all that is observed.

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety +1

      @@championdebater7088 That is a philosophical claim. You'd better be ready to defend it.

  • @thethikboy
    @thethikboy Před 11 lety +2

    Plantinga is amazingly brilliant - a formidable champion of reason

    • @martam4142
      @martam4142 Před 4 lety

      Yes, he is amazing.

    • @asix9178
      @asix9178 Před rokem

      You two have an extremely low bar if you think Plantinga is a ‘champion’. He’s a loser for positing this idiotic EAAN.

    • @anteodedi8937
      @anteodedi8937 Před rokem

      - a formidable champion of sophistry

    • @thethikboy
      @thethikboy Před rokem

      @@anteodedi8937 you should be capable of such sophistry

  • @T12J7
    @T12J7 Před 11 lety

    But if we just argue inside the beliefs them self, inside a logical brain, then why it should get it right? Maybe it is harmful for survival that organism gets it right. Maybe the Truth compels the organism to do self harming and survival damaging actions. And this I mean in the light of the doctrine of Jesus; dying daily for others is not the best motto for survival, even when it is ultimately the most lucrative, because by doing so, you will have treasures that death can't touch.

  • @JaGaJG1
    @JaGaJG1 Před 8 lety

    It's the same problem postmodernism faces in general terms

  • @benaberry
    @benaberry Před 11 lety

    16.30 - Al makes comment to an atheist before Dawin didnt have a good response to how life got here.....the answer we dont know seems not sufficient to AL or a believer, but an atheist has no problem saying that. For the believer to say they know it was god is based on no evidence or knowledge. That is the difference here - science is the best method we have for understanding nature and religion is good for pretending to understand something without evidence.

  • @benaberry
    @benaberry Před 11 lety

    If god was self-evident we would all believe in it. I have never heard of an axioms for instance that supports god/s.

  • @John_May.
    @John_May. Před 7 lety +1

    This seems dangerously close to Presuppositionalism wrapped up in a better argument. At least until one unwraps it from the denseness. I thought I had a handle on the argument, then I realized I didn't, now I realize that I think I do and my original opinion is still correct. Help me out; is he saying that we can't really know anything unless we presuppose God?

    • @fedematias95
      @fedematias95 Před 7 lety

      I think he is saying we cannot know anything unless God *exists*. Presupposing its existence or not does not prevent you from knowing things, because God won't stop existing only because you don't believe in him.

    • @John_May.
      @John_May. Před 7 lety

      I guess my problem is that I am not understanding why it is a bad thing that our certainty may only be 50/50 (or less). In the context of Evolution and Naturalism this level of certainty is just the way it is.

  • @benaberry
    @benaberry Před 11 lety

    12.30 - "rational creatures".....
    What is a rational creature - Id say it is a life that is in harmony with nature. If nature is rational then life that is irrational will not survive. Humans considered rational are slowly destroying the earth - are we really rational? Have to potential to be either.