Why You Should Become a Christian: God Makes Logic, Rational Thought, and Science Possible
Logic
Have you ever spent an afternoon thinking about
thinking? Most people I know would quickly answer with a resounding “no.” Some
would throw in an expletive. I admit that I am the type of person who thinks
about thinking.
One aspect of thinking is our ability to determine
the internal consistency of ideas, or whether or not the ideas ‘fit
together.’ We need to be able to know
whether our thinking method itself is accurate. This reasoning is the realm of
formal logic.
Formal logic has always fascinated me. The laws of
logic shape the way we think. They are an open window to the Christian God’s
world.
Let us examine one law for instance: the law of
non-contradiction. It says that
something cannot be both A and Non-A at the same time, in the same
relationship, and in the same sense. This law cannot be denied. To deny it is
to affirm it. For example, if you say, “The law of non-contradiction does not
apply,” you could mean, “The law of non-contradiction does indeed apply.” The
meanings would be the same.
The noted theologian Gordon H. Clark explains:
If the law of [non]
contradiction is curbed, then a collection of letters, w-a-t-e-r, can mean not
only sulfuric acid, but also at the same time and in the same sentence, tree,
stone, Arcturus, the preposition because, and the cow jumped over the moon, ad
infinitum…A word that means everything means nothing.
This law of logic, which leads us to all the others,
is undeniable because to question it is to use it. It is the only way we can
think.
How would an atheist account for a law like this, or
any other of the laws of logic for that matter?
These abstract laws are not the result of observable behavior of objects
or actions. We do not observe the laws of logic occurring in nature. They are “abstract,” not physical things we
can touch.
They are not open for scientific exploration and
study. We assume that logic’s laws work in order to evaluate scientific
evidence. Using science to prove that logic works would be circular reasoning, meaning
that you would have to assume that logic works in order to prove that logic
works.
The laws of logic cannot come from science because
science is based on inductive reasoning from things we see in our environments.
For example, we cannot see the law of non-contradiction in the world. We would
have to see the properties of a non-existent things (non-A). The laws of logic
are abstract constructions that exist only in the mind. We discover the laws of
logic by thought, not observation.
The laws of logic are not evolutionary in origin,
either. Evolutionary processes governed by natural selection would not
necessarily lead to the truth about our world.
If our thinking is a preconditioned response
determined by our genetics, rational impulses would then be determined by
genetics. There would be no decisions made in any traditional sense. We would
all be pre-programmed to do what we do, and therefore there would be no sense
in arguing. We could not change each other’s genetics, so no one could possibly
win.
Natural selection would only encourage behavior that
would lead to survival. We could not be certain our beliefs about the world
were true, only that they let us survive in any given situation.
Further, genetics change from person to person.
Therefore, the undeniable laws of logic would change from one person to the
next.
A Christian can account for the laws of logic by
stating that they come from God. God has originated the laws of logic because
He thinks logically. The laws of logic are a reflection of God’s mind. They do
not change because the God whose thinking they reflect does not change.
As Michael Butler puts it:
If atheists were
consistent with their worldview, they would give up on logic and rationality
altogether. But since they do behave rationally (at least some of the time)
this shows that they are borrowing capital from [Christianity]…
Christianity allows for
abstract and universal laws. Abstract because the Christian worldview teaches
that more things exist than material objects. Thus it makes sense for there to
be abstractions. Moreover, the universality of logic is possible because it is
grounded in the character of God. God is by nature logical. And this
all-powerful, all-knowing God orders all things…
I do not find an adequate explanation for logic and
rational thought outside God. Literally, my thinking about thinking drives me inescapably
to God’s existence.
Rational Thought
How do we know what we know? How do we know what is
true? How do we evaluate one idea against another? How do we interpret the
information our senses provide us? What do we see? Hear? Touch? Smell? Taste?
These questions fascinate me. I first began to ask
questions like this as I studied Human Factors Engineering (HFE) in graduate
school. HFE is a branch of engineering that studies how a human being interacts
with their environment, usually with respect to how we obtain information and how
we perform work. We looked at basic types of mistakes that people make, the way
we obtain information from our senses, the way we process that information, the
way we decide to act, and the way we activate machine controls to act on that
processed information. The field includes ergonomics, but it includes much more
than that.
One of the things we learned ‘right off the bat’ was
the way we interact with our environment is a process. Think of a black box
with arrows going into the left side for what goes into the process (inputs)
and arrows coming out of the right side for what comes out of the process
(outputs). The box itself represents a set of steps performed on the inputs to
reach the outputs.
I had never thought of knowledge being the result,
or output, of a process until those classes. I began to read widely on the
subject, both within my field and outside it. I came across the branch of
philosophy know as epistemology very quickly. According to Wikipedia,
epistemology is “the branch of philosophy that studies the nature, methods,
limitations, and validity of knowledge and belief.” This field fascinates me.
I have been taught to see rational thought as a process.
Any process that reaches an organized output requires someone to set it up and
keep it going. From assembly lines to creation itself, processes require a
processor. Someone must design a process, or it does not lead to purposeful
outcomes. That includes the process of knowledge and the process of thought.
As John Frame puts it here:
[Those that defend the
Christian faith] have often noted that we could not know the world at all
unless it had been designed for knowledge. If the world were nothing but matter,
motion, time, and chance, we would have no reason to think that the ideas in
our heads told us anything about the real world. Only if a person had designed the
world to be known, and the human mind to know it, could knowledge be
possible…without God the data of our experience suggesting order and causality
are unintelligible…So if creation presupposes God, even the denial of creation
presupposes him …
The process of logical thinking and the process of
arriving at knowledge from our senses both require a designer.
We need a
designer who possesses creativity and intention. We need a designer that does
not change his thinking himself. If his thinking process fundamentally changed, then our process of logical thinking
would change as well. Going back to Frame’s writings: “Logic, the laws of
nature, and the laws of morality make no sense unless God is presupposed.” (“Transcendental Arguments: An Essay” by John
Frame, as downloaded from: apollos.ws/transcendental-argument/Transcendental%20Arguments.pdf,
on 2/25/15)
Science
I had been employed as an industrial statistician
for several years in the past. I used statistical methods to determine the best
way to set up manufacturing equipment and processes.
The basic uniformity of nature, the idea that things
in the future will happen as they have in the past, is a requirement for any
kind of knowledge based on probability or science. But how can we be sure our experiments
will work?
We know the future will be basically consistent with
the past with respect to physical laws because the God who upholds those laws
does not change. The way the world works does not change from one moment to the
next because God made it to be relatively consistent.
As apologist Michael Butler says:
That the uniformity of
nature is compatible with the Christian worldview is easily proven ... God, who
is providentially in control of all events, has revealed to us that we can
count on regularities in the natural world.
The Bible teaches that
God providentially causes the harvest to come in due season, for example.
Because of this regularity, we can be assured that scientific endeavors will be
fruitful. Thus, far from presupposing the falsity of Christianity, science would
be impossible without the truth of the Christian worldview.
Once again, my professional life leads me to belief
in God. All of science, not just my profession, depends on the basic uniformity
of nature, and only God’s design of the world to act in a certain way can guarantee
it. The fact that science works proves
that God exists.
God establishes reason, and without Him, we have no
reason to be reasonable at all.
Our next post chapter will shift from philosophy to the
field of history. We will explore the
Person and work of Jesus Christ in the next of our reasons to believe in the
God of the Bible.
Comments
I hope your serach leads you to Jesus Christ as the only hope for your soul. I know He is th eonly hpe for mine.