Guide to Critical Thinking
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Critical th
A
Closer Look
: Warrants for the Belief in God
Striving for warranted judgments might seem difficult when
it comes to beliefs that we have accepted on faith. Note that
not all that we accept on faith is necessarily related to God or
religion. For example, we likely have faith
that the sun will rise
tomorrow, that our spouses are honest with us, and that the car
we parked at the mall will still be there when we return from
shopping. Many American children have faith that the tooth
fairy will exchange money for baby
teeth and that Santa Claus
will bring toys come Christmas. Are we reasoning correctly by
judging such beliefs as warranted? Whatever your answer in
regard to these other issues, questions of religious belief are
more likely to be held up as beyond the reach of logic. It is
important to recognize this idea is far from being obviously
true. Many deeply religious people
have nonetheless found it
advisable to offer arguments in support of their beliefs.
One such individual was Thomas Aquinas, a 13th-century Roman
Catholic Dominican priest and philosopher. In his
Summa Theo-
logica
(Aquinas, 1947), he advanced five logical arguments for
God’s existence that do not depend on faith.
The 20th-century Oxford scholar and Christian apologist C. S. Lewis, perhaps best known for
the popular children’s series
The Chronicles of Narnia
, did not embrace his Anglican religion
until he was in his thirties. In
his books
Mere Christianity
and
Miracles: A Preliminary Study
, he
employs reason to defend Christian beliefs and the logical possibility of miracles.
There are, of course, many more examples. The important point to draw from this is that all
of our judgments of faith—from the faith in the sun rising tomorrow to
the faith in the exis-
tence of God—should be warranted beliefs and not just beliefs that we readily accept without
question. In other words, even faith should make sense in order to be able to communicate
such beliefs to those who do not share those beliefs. Note that philosophers who have pre-
sented arguments in defense of their religious views have helped transform
the nature of reli-
gious disagreement to one in which the differences are generally debated in an intellectually
enlightening way.
We have not yet reached the point in which differences in religious views are no longer the
cause of wars or killing. Nonetheless, the power of argument in the formation of our beliefs is
that it supports social harmony despite diversity and disagreement in views,
and we all gain
from presenting our unique positions in debated issues.
Photos.com/Thinkstock
In his
Summa Theologica
,
Thomas Aquinas advanced the
idea that belief in the existence
of God can be grounded in
logical argument.
warranted judgments—is as essential as learning to read and write.
Knowledge of logic is a
relatively tiny morsel of information compared to all that you know thus far, but it has the
capacity to change your life for the better.
har85668_01_c01_001-024.indd 13
4/9/15 11:20 AM
© 2015 Bridgepoint Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Not for resale or redistribution.
Section 1.4
Arguments Outside of Logic
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