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The Emptiness of the Supernatural Hypothesis
The Recalcitrant Imago Dei
Human Persons and the Failure of Naturalism
by
J.P. Moreland
Supernatural beliefs about mind, morality and the self are losing plausibility as
naturalistic explanations gain traction. In response, supernaturalists argue
that gaps in these explanations are evidence for the failure of naturalism. But
the success of science and the potential for ongoing research and conceptual
development to close such gaps suggest otherwise. Moreover, since supernatural
explanations bypass the evidential and methodological constraints governing
secular scientific inquiry, they end up facile, unsupported and empty.
Well aware of
the success of science, advocates for supernaturalism are not about to cede the
field to naturalists, and they have historical and cultural momentum on their
side: all of organized religion’s accumulated wealth, property, institutions,
social capital, ceremony and apologetics, all the New Age fuzzy thinking about
fringe science, the paranormal and the occult, all the deeply ingrained secular
memes of mind/body dualism and contra-causal free will that set the self above
physical nature. If modern Western culture has a predominate worldview
orientation, it’s still overwhelmingly supernaturalist, stemming from two
millennia of exposure to aggressively marketed theism and other wish-fulfilling
worldviews, the Enlightenment notwithstanding. What we might call the
supernatural hypothesis – that supernatural agents are active in the natural
world – is alive and well, taken as uncontroversial fact by most folks. Among those
defending it is Biola University philosopher J.P. Moreland in his book
The Recalcitrant Imago Dei: Human Persons and the Failure of Naturalism.
He argues that human beings, made in the image of God, possess characteristics,
powers and faculties that naturalism can’t explain, which in turn counts as
evidence in favor of Christianity. The “recalcitrant” facts that embarrass
naturalism are the existence of consciousness, contra-causal free will,
rationality, the soul, and objective morality, each of which gets a chapter
(followed by an appendix on philosopher Thomas Nagel’s account of reason, which
I won’t discuss). What Moreland calls the “Grand Story” of naturalism – that all
phenomena are essentially physical or composed of physical parts, and can in
principle be explained by causal or emergent relations – fails in the face of
these facts. To account for them properly requires that something exist beyond
nature, therefore naturalism is false. The project of falsifying naturalism has
considerable urgency for Moreland, since he believes it’s responsible for what
he sees as the moral and spiritual decline of our culture. Of course,
demonstrating the failure of naturalism wouldn’t make Moreland’s Christian
theism necessarily true; it would only make it one contender among many brands
of supernaturalism. Another difficulty for Moreland is that it’s very hard to
prove, once and for all, that naturalistic explanations of perplexing things
such as consciousness will never be forthcoming. Present explanatory gaps
may be closed by scientific and conceptual revolutions undreamt of by Moreland,
so it seems premature to say naturalism has forever failed. But looming
even larger is the question of explanation itself. As Moreland says, “One of the
functions of a worldview is to provide an explanation of facts, of reality the
way it actually is” (p. 3). But what counts as a good explanation?
Readings in recent theology, including this book, suggest that theologians and
theistic philosophers such as Moreland aren’t operating under the same epistemic
and explanatory constraints as secular scientists and naturalistic philosophers.[1]
Theistic standards of evidence are considerably more relaxed in comparison to
science, and of course theologians have a big stake in reaching a desired
conclusion: that not only the supernatural exists, but it exists as described by
their particular religious tradition. Not surprisingly, the conclusion is
reached. Philosophers Ronaldo De Sousa and Daniel Dennett have likened the
theistic explanatory enterprise to playing
tennis without a net. Although
naturalists are hardly immune to bias from wanting to reach desired conclusions,
their paramount commitment isn’t to validating a particular picture of the
world, but to a method of inquiry exemplified by (but not limited to) science in
collaboration with philosophy. Thus far, such inquiry has given us no reason to
believe in something beyond nature, the space-time manifold encompassing all the
phenomena described by physics, chemistry and biology. But naturalists such as
myself like to think that were evidence to accumulate in favor of the
supernatural hypothesis, we would gracefully acquiesce. After all, it would have
been reached with our most reliable mode of justifying beliefs about the world,
so on what grounds would we resist? Meanwhile, the epistemic humility attending
naturalism is there for all to see: naturalists readily admit that we don’t
have transparent, bullet-proof explanations of such things as consciousness or
the origins of life and the cosmos – we are very puzzled. We also concede that
there are open questions about free will, rationality, the self and morality
when approached naturalistically. But for supernaturalists such as Moreland,
these questions have long since been wrapped up and put to bed. Their main
occupation isn’t inquiry, but defending their worldview against the competition. Moreland
engages with naturalism at a philosophically technical level, so this book is
most suitable for those with at least some familiarity with the philosophies of
mind, action, ethics and metaphysics. What becomes clear is just how intertwined
the questions of consciousness, free will, rationality, self and morality are,
and how theistic mind/body dualism as wielded by Moreland is able at a stroke to
(seemingly) resolve the puzzles naturalism is left facing. The only difficulties
are whether such dualism is actually explanatory, given the physical realities
theists admit are the case, and whether there’s good evidence for supernatural
agents independent of their purported problem-solving abilities. If
God and the soul exist, then perhaps everything falls readily into place. But
inquiring minds will want good evidence for their existence beyond their
explanatory convenience, otherwise they seem too ad hoc and wish-fulfilling to
take seriously. Consciousness
is arguably the most recalcitrant of the facts facing naturalism since there’s
little consensus among naturalists themselves on how to locate it in nature.
Although consciousness seems an everyday sort of phenomenon, given the billions
of human beings (and likely other creatures) that enjoy conscious states, the
puzzling fact remains that such states aren’t publicly observable in the way
other aspects of nature are. Subjective experiences are essentially private
affairs. No one has ever seen a pain, the taste of mango, or the experience of
red in the way we see a physical object.[2]
Experiences don’t seem to weigh anything, aren’t extended in space, yet for all
that are undeniably real for those that have them. Given these peculiarities,
the temptation is to suppose they comprise a categorically different realm of
existence: the non-physical, mental realm. As Moreland correctly points out in
his interesting if necessarily incomplete critique of naturalistic explanations
of consciousness, it seems impossible to get from matter, however artfully
combined and functioning in the form of beings like us, to something that’s
categorically immaterial. A possible conclusion to draw, therefore, is that if
all natural phenomena are physical, then non-physical mental phenomena such as
conscious experiences must be supernatural, reflections in us of God’s
immaterial nature. Moreland’s
theistic explanation for consciousness is, as he puts it, personal, not
scientific, in that conscious minds exist because an intelligent personal agent,
God, created them in his own image: …if God
exists, He may well create a variety of kinds of entities, and it [sic] may
create various kinds ex nihilo or by actualizing potentialities in precursors
that go far beyond what is countenanced in the Grand Story [of naturalism].
Given theism, one would expect creative variety in being and there is no bar to
holding that various kinds of things are quite discrete…the theist has no need
to begin with a basic account and try to locate other entities in terms of a
limited number of basic entities. (p. 32) Compared to
the poor naturalist, the theist is in an apparently enviable position. He’s not
burdened with the explanatory or evidential constraints of science, nor with
achieving any kind of theoretical unity among admittedly very disparate
(“quite discrete”) phenomena, the physical brain versus its conscious mental
states. He simply posits the existence of a creator who wants himself mirrored
in his creation, and shazam! – the mind/body problem is solved: consciousness is
placed in each of our heads by God. This, what I call an
easy
button explanation (“That was easy!”), stands the theist in excellent stead
so long as the existence of the creator is granted (for more examples see the
conclusion of this review). But Moreland offers no evidence for God’s existence
apart from his purported role as creative agent. Instead, his argument for the
supernatural hypothesis consists in highlighting the difficulties facing
naturalistic accounts of consciousness, including those of philosophers Frank
Jackson, John Searle and Colin McGinn. But of course most naturalists concede
such difficulties (if not necessarily precisely as Moreland describes them), yet
for some reason they aren’t flocking to supernaturalism. The reason, of course,
is that to our way of thinking Moreland’s appeal to God is simply an evasion of
some very demanding epistemic responsibilities, an explanatory cheap trick
that short-circuits the fascinating project of locating mind in nature. Yes,
mental phenomena such as pains, tickles, tastes and thoughts seem intractably
other than physical phenomena, but to count them supernatural is to leave the
puzzle essentially unexplored. Besides, the fact that consciousness very
reliably appears in conjunction with what we know are naturally evolved human
brains strongly suggests that it too lies within nature, not outside it.
For those
wanting a philo-scientific challenge, the shortcomings of naturalistic
explanations of consciousness is the spur to further empirical research and
conceptual innovation, not a reason to give up on the Grand Story of naturalism.
In pursuing it, we might discover that consciousness is neither categorically
immaterial nor straightforwardly physical, but rather representational:
conscious phenomenal states like the experience of colors, tastes, pains,
thoughts, and even the felt sense of self are, perhaps, a necessary entailment
of being a behaviorally autonomous system that instantiates informational
states, states which represent itself as acting in the world, including the act
of representation. Further, the contrast between the mental and physical might
itself be entailed by being a sufficiently sophisticated world-representing
system within a concept-generating culture. The system will likely represent the
difference between its own proprietary internal representational states (the
subjective and mental) and the external facts those states represent (the
objective and physical). But this is just one of many theoretical possibilities
being explored by neuroscientists and philosophers, the point being that
consciousness studies is alive and well, not the cul de sac Moreland
suggests it is. In his
chapter on freedom, Moreland claims that the accepted notion of free will
worldwide is libertarian or contra-causal: human agents are first movers,
uncaused causers of action. As he puts it: …a first
mover is not subject to laws in its initiation of action. Since such an
initiation is a first, spontaneous, action not caused by a prior event, it
amounts to the absolute origination of initiatory movement…[T]he circumstances
within (e.g., motives, desires, reasons) and outside (environmental conditions)
the agent at the time of action are not sufficient to determine that or fix the
chances of the action taking place. Given those circumstances, the agent can
either exercise or refrain from exercising his/her active power, and this
ability is the essential, causal factor for what follows. (pp. 47-8) Not
surprisingly, science-based naturalism discovers no such agent in the world,
since observations of human brains, bodies and behavior always suggest that
there are causal antecedents for choices and actions. We don’t observe
that human persons decide what to do independent of their internal and external
circumstances, and indeed such a power of choice would render choices
unintelligible and arbitrary, divorced from the person’s own motives and
situation. Even from a commonsense standpoint, never mind science, it isn’t
obvious that such freedom exists or that if it did, it would do us any practical
good. So why does
Moreland think we have contra-causal free will? It’s because “people the world
over are simply directly aware of themselves exercising active power…On the
basis of such awareness, we form the justified belief that we exercise
originative, free, active power for the sake of teleological goals” (p. 43).
This reliance on direct awareness as trustworthy grounds for belief illustrates
a central cognitive commitment of most forms of supernaturalism: that
first
person data such as intuitions and introspected feelings, if sufficiently
widespread, are accurate reflections of reality. But from the perspective of
naturalistic empiricism this is among supernaturalism’s greatest epistemic
failings. The scientist is unimpressed with majoritarian appeals to intuition,
since after all it’s quite possible that we don’t have reliable
introspective access to the truth about ourselves, either as agents or selves.
The feeling of being contra-causally free, if indeed you feel that way, could
arise because you’re not in a position to observe (you’re unconscious of) the
intricate causal workings of your brain and body as they interact with the
world: you are that brain and body. So your choices and decisions might
well present themselves as seemingly spontaneous, without causal antecedents,
when in fact they are
fully caused. Similarly for
the soul, the immaterial subject of consciousness: it might feel as
though you exist as a disembodied agent sitting somewhere in the head, having
experience and governing the body. But to take such a feeling as unimpeachable
evidence for the existence of the soul is to suppose that feelings are
necessarily accurate reflections of reality, when we know they often aren’t.
Even most supernaturalists concede that subjective intuitions about factual
matters, for instance the threat of global warming, generally need corroboration
by public, intersubjectively available evidence that isn’t biased by possibly
defective perceptual or sensory processes, wishful thinking, hide-bound
conventional wisdom, or prejudice. Why then, when it comes to factual matters
about human self and agency, should we place greater trust in intuitions rather
than such evidence? The fact (if indeed it is a fact – research is underway[3])
that a majority of folks worldwide intuit that they are souls and uncaused
causers establishes nothing about the reliability and accuracy of their
intuitions – more intuitions doesn’t mean better. Moreover, public observational
evidence for contra-causal free will and the soul is notably lacking, which is
why most scientists and philosophers have long since given up on them. This means
that Moreland’s charge against naturalism, that it can’t account for the fact of
libertarian agency, has no force. Our most reliable mode of justifying beliefs
about the world – intersubjective empiricism – discloses no such fact. Moreland
does a nice job of showing why philosopher John Searle ends up in a muddle
trying to articulate a naturalized version of contra-causal free will: there are
no causal gaps in the operations of a physically instantiated agent that the
agent itself could exploit in order to transcend causation. But this is a
problem for Searle, not for naturalism, which happily abandons
the fiction of uncaused causers, whether they be gods, gremlins or freely
willing souls. The
interrelatedness of Moreland’s supposedly recalcitrant facts comes out strongly
in his discussion of rationality, in which he argues that only conscious souls
with contra-causal freedom could possibly engage in rational deliberation.
Reasoning, he claims, requires a unity of consciousness within which it
transpires and a persisting self to carry it out. These conditions are only met
if the self is a unity, a “single, simple (uncomposed of separate parts)
subject.” Composite physical brains just can’t support the unity of
consciousness, for instance of visual consciousness, as had by a persisting
self: …a
physicalist may claim that such a unified awareness of the entire room by means
of one’s visual field consists in the fact that there are a number of different
physical parts of the brain each of which terminates a different wavelength and
each of which is “aware” only of part of and not the whole of the complex fact
(the entire room). However,
this will not work, because it cannot account for the fact that there is a
single, unitary awareness of the entire visual field. It is the very same self
that is aware of the desk to the left, the podium at the centre, and indeed,
each and every distinguishable aspect of the room. But there is no single part
of the brain that is correspondingly activated as a terminus for the entire
visual field. Only a single, uncomposed mental substance can account for the
unity of one’s visual field, or, indeed, the unity of consciousness in
general. (p. 70) Moreland, not
surprisingly, cannot imagine how being a spatially distributed neural
network (a brain) could entail the conscious experience of visual unity
presented to a continuously experienced unitary self. But this, what
neurophilosophers call the binding problem, is among the primary targets of
ongoing research. The neural correlates of consciously experienced gestalts,
including what philosopher Thomas Metzinger calls the highest-order phenomenal
“holon”
[4]
of experiencing oneself as a stable, persisting subject in a persisting external
world, are gradually being pinned down, as well as their functional roles and
interconnections. So to say at this early stage of consciousness studies that
only a single non-composite mental substance can account for the unity of
consciousness, including the sense of a persisting unified self, is patently to
jump the gun. And of course positing such a substance isn’t really to offer an
account of such unity, since it’s obscure how the non-physical soul manages to
bind the disparate physical inputs to the brain’s visual system and systems
supporting other sensory modalities. Such an account would have to solve the
root problem facing dualists: how does something essentially immaterial interact
with something essentially material? Moreland, not surprisingly, gives us no
hints on this score. He also
claims that a reasoning self must be contra-causally free from determinism: Acts of
deliberation presuppose that the rational process is ‘up to me’ and is not
determined prior to or during the process. The conclusion is drawn freely. My
act of deliberation itself contributes by way of exercises of active power to
what outcome is reached. Acts of deliberation presuppose that there is more than
one possible conclusion one could reach, but if determinism is true, there is
only one outcome possible, and it was fixed prior to the act of deliberation by
forces outside the agent’s control. In deliberation, we not only weigh evidence,
we also weight evidence – freely assign it certain importance in the
rational process. Moreover we stand at the end of deliberative processes as
intellectually responsible rational agents. Our conclusions are ones we or
anyone in relevantly similar circumstances ought to draw. On the
reasonable assumption that ought implies can, then genuine epistemic
responsibility requires free will. (p. 74, original emphasis) Note that
there’s strong tension between the claim that rational agents in similar
circumstances ought to draw the same conclusion and the claim that such
agents are not ultimately constrained by those circumstances in drawing
the conclusion. Being rational consists in being able to deploy powers of
observation and inference such that a more or less truth-tracking and thus
behaviorally advantageous conclusion is reached, given one’s beliefs and
desires. One takes the relevant evidence into account, deduces conclusions from
premises according to rules of thumb and logical inference, and ends up with a
provisional best bet about what's the case or what action to take.
It isn’t at all clear that being contra-causally free helps with any of this. In
being rational, we don’t want to be free to ignore the evidence before us, nor
do we want to be free to decide whether or not to obey rules of inference. Such
freedoms would render rational deliberation less reliable, not more. The
fact that, in a given situation, only one conclusion is possible on a
deterministic view of ourselves doesn’t disqualify us as rational, rather it
certifies us as rational: a rational creature is just that which is
determined, by its mostly reliable powers of observation and inference, to
reach a likely (not infallibly) true and thus behaviorally advantageous view of
its situation. That’s precisely why similar agents in similar situations will
reach similar conclusions, if they are rational. Were they
contra-causally free, they would likely wander all over the map of decision
space, not likely to their advantage. The normativity (the “ought”) of reasoning
derives from, is dependent upon, being properly constrained in the manner
of one’s deliberations such that one usually (not infallibly) reaches true
conclusions.[5]
Moreland is
also wrong to say that the conclusion a deterministic reasoner would reach is
“fixed prior to the act of deliberation by forces outside the agent’s control.”
Rather, the conclusion is reached by the agent’s act of deliberation itself,
which is just as causally necessary to the conclusion as any preceding causes,
such as the causes of the agent’s reasoning capacities. As so often happens,
those worried about determinism, like Moreland, forget that human persons are
just as causally efficacious, whether reasoning or acting on impulse, as the
impersonal forces that helped to create them. We don’t have to have libertarian
free will to exert power and control: rational deliberation, although likely
deterministic,[6]
nevertheless guides effective decision-making that has far-reaching effects on
the world. Indeed, an uncaused, uninfluenced deliberator, natural or
supernatural, would have no reason to decide one way or another. The
supernatural hypothesis adds nothing worth wanting to our powers of rationality.
There are
several other capacities necessary for rationality that Moreland supposes that
strictly natural, physical creatures can’t have: capacities for a priori and
introspective knowledge, for goal directed action (such as seeking to reach a
correct conclusion), for valuing rationality itself, and for having intentional
mental states, such as beliefs, that successfully refer to the world outside the
head. Nor, he argues, if reasoning is simply a brain process, can the
informational content of beliefs and desires play a role in explaining behavior.
These are all very strong claims about what “merely” physical creatures can’t in
principle do, claims about the necessary explanatory failure of
naturalistic cognitive neuroscience, for which these puzzles constitute a major
research domain. Deconstructing in full measure Moreland’s confidence in this
failure is beyond the scope of this review, but it’s telling that lots of very
smart people, some of them Christian physicalists (!), are vigorously pursuing
explanations of rationality that have no need of the supernatural hypothesis.[7] As we’ve
seen, the immaterial non-composite soul is the lynchpin of Moreland’s
explanation of consciousness, free will and rationality. The soul, made in the
image of God, is the indivisible core of personhood, a core which experiences,
wields contra-causal freedom, and engages in reasoning. If composite
deterministic physical systems cannot do such things, this seemingly
increases the plausibility of the soul’s existence. But as we’ve also seen,
Moreland can’t (or shouldn’t) help himself to the premature conclusion that
naturalistic explanations must fail when it comes to consciousness and
rationality (they don’t have to account for contra-causal free will, since
there’s likely no such animal). Since naturalism hasn’t failed yet, what other
grounds for the soul’s existence might there be? As discussed
in the section on free will above, Moreland relies heavily on the
incorrigibility of first person data – intuitions and introspections that don’t
rely on intersubjective evidence, but are directly presented – as proof of the
soul. For example: …it is
directly evident to me that an object composed of separable parts lacks the sort
of simple unity necessary for a conscious, thinking being. (p. 114) We are
simply directly aware of ourselves through various acts of introspection, and in
such awareness, we are directly aware of ourselves as simple spiritual
substances. (p. 114) …the dualist
view of the soul is grounded in direct awareness of one’s self and in the fact
that such an awareness provides a unifying basis for the other items we seem to
know. (p. 114) …through
direct awareness, I am aware of myself as a simple substance. (p. 118) Moreland also
suggests that the ubiquity of the soul intuition helps establish its validity:
The
intuitions [about the soul] shared worldwide…seem to be quite reasonable to most
folks. Moreover, when most people introspect, they do not confront their
“composed animality”…but their own unified, simple conscious self. (p. 116) These claims
are vulnerable to the challenge to the incorrigibility of first person data,
which I won’t repeat here – see the earlier section on free will. But in this
chapter Moreland cites another sort of evidence for the soul, near death
experiences: I also know
that disembodied survival is possible. Consider the well-known account of a
woman named Viola who was checked into a hospital in Augusta, Georgia, in 1971
for routine gall bladder surgery. Six days after surgery…her condition had
worsened to the point she was operated on again and died at 12:15 pm on the
operating table. When the doctor said she was dead, Viola was confused. She had
been in excruciating pain, when she suddenly felt a ring [sic] in her ear and,
then, she popped out of her body!... She…sensed
presences around her that she took to be angels. And get this: she could
travel anywhere her thoughts directed her, so she found herself instantaneously
in Rockville, Maryland… (p. 112, original emphasis) Moreland goes
on to relate that during her disembodied visit to Rockville (and elsewhere),
Viola saw things that were later confirmed by eye-witnesses, which he takes to
be nearly sufficient to confirm the fact of disembodied existence.
Nearly, since Moreland concludes, with proper circumspection, that Viola’s soul
travels are “at least metaphysically possible and cannot be ruled out prior to
investigation of the eyewitnesses and so forth” (p. 113). There are, however,
less metaphysically extravagant explanations of Viola’s out of body experience
(OBE) available to the naturalist. Experiments have shown that given the right
external cues, the brain can generate the sense of self as projected outside
the body, either partially (feeling a rubber arm as one’s own) and perhaps even
totally (feeling that you are located at virtual image of yourself a few feet
away).[8]
The normal ongoing experience of being embodied can likely be explained as a
function of very stable neurally-instantiated representations, in which case it
isn’t a stretch to suppose that Viola’s marginally functioning, destabilized
brain was responsible for her experience of disembodiment, the
experience of flying to Rockville, and all the rest of her OBE as she lay on
the operating table. That dreams (ordinary and lucid) sometimes afford these
sorts of experiences also counts against the supernatural interpretation of
Viola’s near death experience. Moreland also
argues that “It is only if organisms or persons are simple spiritual substances
that they can be continuants” (p. 136), that is, persist over time as the same
identifiable entity for themselves and others. But, absent a spiritual
substance, we have no difficulty identifying individual persons from one year to
the next, or ourselves to ourselves, given the robust stability of our unique
composite
construction: the stability of the neural structures that account for our
particular character and behavior, and the stability of external physical
attributes such as voice, face and body. A person is a persisting
spatio-temporal pattern constituted of physical parts at different levels of
description (atomic, chemical, biological), many of which might be replaced over
a lifetime while the pattern stays largely intact. That pattern, neuroscience is
showing, has the remarkable capacity to represent itself to itself by means of
the phenomenal experience of being a continuing I that owns each
successive moment of its conscious existence. There is no simple, non-composite
essence of self or person which that experience corresponds to, but the
way naturalists see it that’s not necessary for being a full-fledged continuing
person with a perfectly real and functionally necessary sense of self.[9]
Of course, since naturalists can’t categorically disprove the existence
of the soul, the supernatural hypothesis, however sketchy the intersubjective
evidence, will always be available to those wanting to be more than bodies.
Which is why supernaturalists will always be with us. Naturalists
would like to deflect the supernaturalist’s oft-made claim that we can’t be good without
God or some extra-human source of objective moral truths. As Moreland rightly
points out, it’s difficult, perhaps impossible, to find in impersonal Nature any
sort of validation for our moral intuitions, intuitions which evolutionary
accounts suggest had adaptive value, whether or not they reflect objective
values. Yet we ordinarily suppose our moral norms do reflect something
objective, something that’s independent of them but which they accurately
reflect. This moral logic says murder is objectively and intrinsically wrong,
period, so we’re right to strongly feel that it's wrong. Regarding
this, Moreland says …evolutionary naturalism would seem to predict that human moral agents would
not be interested in or preoccupied with the…intrinsic rightness or wrongness of
intents, motives, virtues/vices, moral rules and moral acts. Rather, those
agents should be interested in and preoccupied with the reproductively
advantageous consequences of intents, motives and so forth. (p. 151) But
evolutionary psychologists think they can explain our penchant for moral realism.
One story (among others) has it that creatures who felt really strongly
about moral rules, to the point of projecting them onto reality as objective
eternal truths, formed the most resilient and reproductively successful social
groups.[10]
We, with our moral realist intuitions, are their descendants. For Moreland,
this sort of explanation is a debunking of morality, just further proof
that naturalism can’t supply us with real morality, which must have
supernatural warrant for its claims. But of course we can’t just stipulate that
morality is real only if it has such warrant. If we find ourselves often
behaving morally, as being strongly bound by moral norms, that’s prima facie
evidence that morality exists whatever else is the case. Indeed, there’s no
better evidence. If we should discover that, contrary to our moral realist
intuitions, that there is no God-given or cosmic rule book to which our
intuitions correspond, can we then conclude morality is a fiction? Not if our
behavior is any guide, since, as all the evidence shows, we’d continue to behave
morally. As most theists admit, naturalists who disbelieve in extra-human moral
foundations are overall no less ethical than supernaturalists. But, Moreland
asks the naturalist, absent the foundations, why behave morally?
The naturalist answers: because human flourishing demands it. Our well-being as
individuals depends crucially on being accepted as members of a larger community
which is only viable by virtue of cooperation among individuals. This in turn
requires that most individuals assign a high value to the basic moral precept
that even liberals and conservatives agree on: consideration for others. Treat
them fairly and don’t harm them without very good justification. Most of us find
that this precept has a strong claim on us, and a naturalistic explanation for
it does nothing to lessen its force. Regarding
that explanation, Moreland claims that our capacities for moral knowledge and
our valuing of morality itself “are utterly without precedent in the long
history of evolutionary adaptation, their appearance is without explanation…”
(p. 150). But there are obvious precursors to human morality in the behavior of
other mammalian social species, for instance chimpanzees and bonobos. It isn’t difficult
to see the adaptive value of such other-regarding sentiments, and their
importance to the creatures that have them, in maintaining strong social groups.
Moreland
argues that only God can endow all individuals with equal worth and rights,
whatever their origins and characteristics. But there’s a naturalistic
alternative: the claim of universal equal worth and rights is a culturally
engineered extension of our original, admittedly rather chauvinistic tribal
morality. On a scientific understanding of ourselves, there are no morally
relevant differences between in-group and out-group, men and women, gays and
straights, Christians and atheists, leaders and followers, elites and
underclass. We all more or less equally and strongly desire love, security, and
autonomy and there need be no further warrant beyond this desire to
justify its realization across the board of
human variation. In short, morality is a natural phenomenon, produced by
evolution, that results in powerfully motivating social norms of fairness and
minimizing harm, that when pursued in the equalizing light of science help to
ensure conditions of flourishing for all individuals.[11]
Because it’s deeply embedded in evolved human nature, morality has no need of
the supernatural hypothesis to be a going concern, which is why naturalists can
be, and are,
good without God. Naturalists will agree with Moreland that morality, rationality, the self, and
human freedom as he conceives of them can’t be explained naturalistically.
This is to be expected since according to Moreland they all require something
essentially supernatural: a contra-causally free agent that
consciously deliberates, chooses and obeys without itself being fully at the
effect of antecedent and surrounding conditions. While it’s true that our moral and rational
capacities have often been thought to depend on an uncaused causer and
reasoner, over the last two centuries science has gradually called this
assumption into question. Once we discard it, then we are free to explore
explanations that involve physical systems and processes available to public
observation, and that link human individuals in all their complexity to the
natural world from which they spring. Moreland is
right to point out that these explanations are sometimes incomplete, and his
analyses sometimes expose the weaknesses of naturalistic accounts to good
effect. But these failings are not necessarily terminal, as he claims to have
shown. They simply point up the widely acknowledged fact that naturalistic
science and philosophy face big challenges when it comes to explaining the human
animal and its higher capacities as expressed in varying cultural circumstances. Although he
occasionally hits the mark, it’s hard to take Moreland’s critique of naturalism
seriously because his supernatural explanations are not bound by the standards
of evidence and theory-building that constrain naturalists. With God to appeal
to, the easy button is always within easy reach, the net conveniently down. As
he says about our moral capacities: As beings
created in the image of God who were placed here to live in light of moral
knowledge and knowledge of other intrinsic values…these abilities of human
faculties are hardly surprising. (p. 150) About
objective moral norms: The theist
begins with a Being who is intrinsically good… (p. 146) About
rationality: Given the
ontology of such [rational] acts, it is easy to see how they could obtain in a
theistic world because the fundamental level of being – God – exhibits this
ontology itself. Since they are fundamental to reality, it is not hard to see
how they could obtain a certain points in creation, especially when those
allegedly made in God’s image appear. (p. 68) And about
libertarian (contra-causal) free will: The
theist…takes the fundamental being not to be particles, but a Person who is
Himself a libertarian agent. Given that the theist starts with a Being who
exhibits the ontological features of a libertarian free agent, it is not
difficult to see how such features could be exhibited again at an appropriate
time in the development of God’s created order. (p. 52) If one takes
the “ontological features” of consciousness, free agency, rationality, and moral
knowledge to be fundamental to reality – as resident in an all powerful God –
then of course it’s no surprise that God’s favored creations should also possess
such features. But absent independent evidence-based reasons to believe in God,
and given competing naturalistic explanations that meet
high standards of coherence, verifiability, transparency and simplicity,
Moreland’s supernatural hypothesis has little appeal for those wanting to know
how things really work. It’s their evidential and methodological constraints
that make naturalistic explanations worth pursuing, and it’s the lack of such
constraints that makes the supernatural hypothesis facile, uninteresting and
ultimately empty. Tennis
with a net presents a literal obstacle to the players, the negotiation of
which requires skill and adds entertainment value. Analogously, naturalistic
explanations add cognitive value by overcoming the hurdles nature erects to a
transparent understanding of herself: the huge composite complexity of the real
world and the limited scope of untutored human intelligence in modeling it.
Science is a culturally evolved skill set that leverages our innate powers of
observation and inference so that we can sort out the complexity and see its
unity, a very satisfying pursuit. The beauty and coherence of naturalism is that higher-level properties do arise from simpler elements; the
natural world is a marvelously productive and innovative system,
all on its own. By comparison, the supernatural hypothesis, insofar as it makes
factual claims about how the world is and came to be, simply sidesteps the
puzzles that nature affords us. Although it can’t be disproven, it adds no
cognitive value since its explanatory agents – God and the soul – are
conveniently tailored to have exactly those powers and characteristics that
enable such things as consciousness, choice, rationality and morality. Further,
these agents seem nowhere to be found as far as we can publicly ascertain, such
that belief in them necessarily rests on highly unreliable claims to knowledge,
those of subjective intuition, revelation, and biblical authority. For these
reasons the supernatural hypothesis and its non-empirical basis will appeal
primarily to those wanting the existential security of a tame, supervised
universe, the foregone conclusion of Christian theology and apologetics. The
naturalist declines such security in favor of the open-ended excitement of
scientific inquiry, which itself depends on a rational commitment to
epistemic responsibility: draw no factual conclusion before it’s
evidentially warranted.[12]
Thus far, no evidence has surfaced to suggest that there’s anything supernatural
operating in the natural world. However, it’s an interesting and open question whether
scientific inquiry could conceivably require acceptance of the supernatural
hypothesis, that is, force us to conclude that a non-composite agent not subject
to natural laws is causing observable things to happen.[13]
It would seem dogmatic of naturalists not to admit that it could, but on the
other hand the very idea of a cogent explanation seems to require at least
something in the way of causal regularities and connections exemplified by
natural laws. To know for
sure that a supernatural agent is behind a phenomenon, for instance
consciousness, we’d have to have an evidence-based account of the agent’s
categorically supernatural characteristics and modes of operation, otherwise the
default conclusion would be that a natural explanation exists that we haven’t
yet discovered. What doesn’t follow is that an ongoing failure to naturalize a
phenomenon supports the supernatural hypothesis in the absence of positive
evidence for that hypothesis. To be epistemically responsible in the mode
of science, we need proof of supernatural agency in terms of verifiably
supernatural characteristics before we justifiably admit something supernatural
into our worldview and give up on naturalistic explanations. Until such time as the supernatural hypothesis gets more
specific, and gains a shred of intersubjective evidence, the naturalistic
alternatives should direct our investigations into the puzzles of consciousness,
human nature and ethics. Moreland and other supernaturalists like to think
naturalism has failed, but the explanatory emptiness of their hypothesis, and
the successes of science thus far, suggest quite the reverse. TWC,
September, 2009
[1]
Reviews of other books by theologians aiming to defeat naturalism are
here,
here, and
here. Many of the themes discussed in this review appear in those as well.
[2]
Even you don’t see, observe, or witness your own experiences;
rather, as a conscious subject you consist of them. You’re not in
a perceptual relation to your own phenomenal states.
[3]
See the
Experimental Philosophy blog for research on beliefs about free
will.
[4]
See Metzinger’s chapter “Faster Than Thought” in
Conscious Experience.
[5]
About which, see Derk Pereboom’s
A Compatibilist Account of the Epistemic Conditions on Rational
Deliberation.
[7]
See Nancey Murphy and Warren Brown’s
Did My Neurons Made Me Do It for one such explanation.
[8]
See Bigna Lenggenhager, Tej Tadi, Thomas Metzinger, and Olaf Blanke, “Video
Ergo Sum: Manipulating Bodily Self-Consciousness,” Science
2007; 317: 1096-1099, and E-letter responses
here. A New Scientist article about research on OBE's is
here.
[9]
See Thomas Metzinger’s
The Ego Tunnel for a cutting edge explanation of how we can be
someone without being an essence.
[11]
According to social psychologist Jonathan Haidt, intuitions about harm
and fairness are just part of our innate moral endowment, see
here.
[12]
This is a rational commitment on the assumption that one’s
paramount objective is to achieve a maximally reliable representation of
reality. For many, this isn’t their paramount objective; they’re
primarily seeking existential security and ultimate meaning, see
Reality and its rivals: putting epistemology first.
[13]
About this question, see Evan Fales’
paper on intelligent design, in which he says “If there are
supernatural causes, then science should seek them. How easy or
difficult this might be will depend upon the content of
supernaturalistic hypotheses and the phenomena they are invoked to
explain, as well as upon what competing naturalistic hypotheses are
available. Science regularly proceeds by way of arguments to the best
explanation (abduction). There is no in principle reason why a physical
phenomenon could not be best explained by a supernaturalistic cause—even
if, as a matter of fact, we have never encountered any such phenomenon.”
Bradley Monton and Sean Carroll make similar arguments
here and
here.
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