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The Argument from religious experience is an argument for the existence of
God, as against materialism.
Outline logical
structure
Its logical structure is essentially as follows:
- There are compelling reasons for considering at least some
religious experiences to point to and validate spiritual realities
that exist in a way that transcends any material
manifestations.
- According to Materialism, nothing exists in a way that
transcends its material manifestations.
- According to Classical Theism in general, and Christianity in
particular, God endows Humans with the ability to have spiritual
experiences and to perceive, albeit imperfectly, such spiritual
realities[1] and
these spiritual realities exist in a way that transcends any
material manifestations.
- Therefore, to the extent that premise (1) is accepted, Theism
is more plausible than Materialism.
Points 2, 3 and 4 are relatively un-controversial, and the
argument is formally valid, so discussion focuses on the premise
(1).
Suggested reasons
for accepting the premise
The principal arguments for the premise are: Very substantial
numbers of "ordinary" people report having had such experiences,
though this isn't to say that religious believers aren't
ordinary[2][3]. Such
experiences are reported in almost all known cultures. Although
such reported experiences may not all correspond to an objective
reality, they are strong enough prima facie evidence that very
compelling arguments to the contrary would be needed to cancel them
out. These experiences often have very significant effects on
people's lives, frequently inducing in them acts of extreme
self-sacrifice well beyond what could be expected from evolutionary
arguments. It is hard to imagine an evolutionary benefit in having
these experiences if they are all, or mostly, false. These
experiences often seem very real to the people involved, and are
quite often reported as being shared by a number of people[4].
Although mass delusions are not inconceivable, one needs compelling
reasons for invoking this as an explanation.
Swinburne suggests that, as two basic principles of rationality,
we ought to believe that things are as they seem unless and until
we have evidence that they are mistaken (principle of credulity),
and that those who do not have an experience of a certain type
ought to believe others who say that they do in the absence of
evidence of deceit or delusion (principle of testimony) and thus,
although if you have a strong reason to disbelieve in the
existence of God you will discount these experiences, in other
cases such evidence should count towards the existence of God.[5]
Suggested reasons
for disputing the premise
- There is little doubt that some reports of religious experience
have naturalistic and/or psychological explanations and are thus
mistaken. If some reports are mistaken, perhaps all such reports
may be.
- These might be mis-firings of evolved mechanisms selected for
very different reasons[6].
- It is conceivable that some claimed religious experiences are
lies, possibly done for attention or acceptance.
- Different people have had, or believed to have had, religious
experiences pointing to the existence of different religions. Not
all of these can be correct. (For more information see the Argument from Inconsistent
Revelations).
- It has been argued that religious experiences are little more
than hallucinations aimed at fulfilling basic psychological desires
of immortality, purpose, etc. Sigmund Freud, for example, considered
God to be simply a psychological "illusion"[7] created
by the mind, instead of an actual existing entity.
Notes and
references
- ^
There are innumerable references in both the Old
testament, from Adam talking with God in Genesis onwards, and
in the New
Testament of which the Transfiguration and St Paul's comments
in 1 Corinthians about spiritual gifts and "seeing through a glass
darkly" (i.e. through a poor mirror, imperfectly) may stand as two
examples
- ^
Polkinghorne Belief in God in an Age of Science' "the surveys
conducted by the distinguished biologist Alister Hardy"
- ^
Swinburne references David Hay Religious Experience Today
(1990) chapters 5, 6 and Appendix
- ^
For example the New
Testament speaks of Jesus, after his resurrection, appearing to
10 or more people at once (see eg 1 Corinthians 15:6, Luke 24, Mt
28, Jn 16, Acts 1).
- ^
Swinburne, Is there a God? p 133–136
- ^
This is broadly Dawkins' line in The God Delusion
- ^
Freud, Sigmund, The Future of an Illusion, W. W. Norton
& Company, ISBN 0393008312
Authors/Sources
Relevant authors and sources include:
- John
Polkinghorne See eg his The faith of a scientist and
Belief in an Age of Science
- Tom Wright who
regards religious experience as one of the four main pointers to
belief in God — see esp. his Simply Christian SPCK 2006,
Ch 2 "The hidden spring"
- Richard
Dawkins who in The God Delusion dismisses the
Argument from religious experience, without formally stating
it.
- Richard
Swinburne esp The Existence of God OUP 2nd Edition
2004 ISBN 0199271682 and Is there a God? OUP 1996 ISBN
0198235453
- Ian Barbour
Religion and Science SCM 1998 ISBN 0 334 02721 7
- William
James wrote the classic account of Varieties of Religious
Experience
- Caroline Franks Davis discusses The Evidential Force of
Religious Experience in her book of that name, OUP 2004 ISBN
0198250010.
- Kai-man Kwan "The Argument from Religious Experience" in The
Blackwell Companion to Natural Theology
See also
Religious experience