Category: World View

  • The Limitations of Naturalism

    Scholar and author Charles Murray has just published a new book titled “Taking Religion Seriously”, which documents his intellectual journey, with supporting evidence, from skeptic/agnostic/atheist toward Christian faith.

    Here is one critic of Murray’s faith journey:

    The critic’s philosophy is pure Naturalism. He is claiming that only natural explanations can count as valid evidence.

    The problem is there is much in life that is not explainable if you limit yourself to natural explanations. Take, for example, the concepts of Evil and justice.

    Most people believe there is such a thing as right and wrong, good and evil, if for no other reason that that they themselves have been a victim of someone else’s evil action. Perhaps being beaten, being treated unfairly.

    In fact, you can go to the playground and hear five-year-olds saying things like: “That’s not fair.” Even children know evil when the see it.

    Why is this so? What explains it better, the atheist world view or the Biblical world view? Can the atheist explain where this understanding of right and wrong comes from? Can it be explained adequately in naturalistic terms?

    Most people also agree that it is a good thing when evil is punished, for example, when the criminal is arrested and put in jail. People crave justice.

    Why is this so? What explains it better, the atheist world view or the Biblical world view? Can the atheist explain where this craving comes from?

    “It evolved” is not responsive, until someone can convincingly prove that there is a gene for evil recognition and a craving-for-justice gene, and then can argue that these genes confer an evolutionary survival advantage.

  • What the typical educated person believes about creation

    Wilfred Reilly is a college professor and author who writes interesting posts on X (formerly known as twitter). I think its fair to say he holds beliefs that are typical for the educated.

    In this post, he states that the Big Bang theory and the Theory of Evolution are satisfactory answers to the big questions of life (Why is there something rather than nothing? How did we get here?).

    But the Big Bang theory is not a valid starting point. The theory can only explain things AFTER 1) an unimaginable amount of energy exists in the singularity, and 2) someone or something causes the expansion of that energy. As Charles Murray
    puts it, (https://x.com/charlesmurray/status/1980267185701638423 )

    As far as I can tell, every physics-based cosmological explanation of the universe boils down to “Grant me an initial miracle, and I’ll explain everything after that.”

    It’s also wrong to assume that the Big Bang theory has much explanatory power. It uses imaginary objects!

    He’s also wrong about what the theory of evolution can explain. No informed person thinks life came from non-life.

    This is a world view issue. He has evaluated and dismissed the possibility of creation without really looking at the evidence.