There are two key varieties of the argument. The argument from reasonable nonbelief (or the argument from divine hiddenness) was first elaborated in J. L. Schellenberg's 1993 book Divine Hiddenness and Human Reason.
This argument says that if God existed (and was perfectly good and
loving) every reasonable person would have been brought to believe in
God; however, there are reasonable nonbelievers; therefore, this God
does not exist.
Theodore Drange subsequently developed the argument from nonbelief, based on the mere existence of nonbelief in God. Drange considers the distinction between reasonable (by which Schellenberg means inculpable) and unreasonable (culpable) nonbelief to be irrelevant and confusing. Nevertheless, the overwhelming majority of academic discussion is concerned with Schellenberg's formulation.
Theodore Drange subsequently developed the argument from nonbelief, based on the mere existence of nonbelief in God. Drange considers the distinction between reasonable (by which Schellenberg means inculpable) and unreasonable (culpable) nonbelief to be irrelevant and confusing. Nevertheless, the overwhelming majority of academic discussion is concerned with Schellenberg's formulation.
The theme of divine hiddenness, silence or darkness has a long history in Judeo-Christian theology. The roots of the Judeo-Christian description of God as hidden are in the Bible, for example in the Psalms, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?....I cry by day, but you do not answer....", and in Isaiah: "Truly you are a God who hides himself, O God of Israel, the Savior."
One of the first philosophers to write on the theme of divine hiddenness was Anselm of Canterbury, who in his Proslogion links it to an existential or spiritual concern:
I have never seen thee, O Lord my God; I do not know thy form. What, O most high Lord, shall this man do, an exile far from thee? What shall thy servant do, anxious in his love of thee, and cast out afar from thy face? He pants to see thee, and thy face is too far from him. He longs to come to thee, and thy dwelling place is inaccessible. He is eager to find thee, and knows not thy place. He desires to seek thee, and does not know thy face. Lord, thou art my God, and thou art my Lord, yet never have I seen thee. It is thou that hast made me, and hast made me anew, and hast bestowed upon me all the blessings I enjoy; and not yet do I know thee. Finally, I was created to see thee and not yet have I done that for which I was made.
Daniel Howard-Snyder and Paul Moser, in the introduction to a volume
of papers on the idea of divine hiddenness as evidence against theism,
cite Nietzsche's
question as anticipating this contemporary theme: "a god who is
all-knowing and all-powerful and who does not even make sure his
creatures understand his intentions — could that be a god of goodness?"
Discussion
of Schellenberg's argument has made explicit a non-theological use of
the term 'hiddenness', which is now commonly used simply as a way of
talking about the subjective condition of nonbelief in God.
In his first presentation of the argument Schellenberg emphasized
inculpable or reasonable nonbelief, but he has since shifted to speaking
more specifically about nonresistant nonbelief. The first presentation is often given by commentators as follows, based on Schellenberg's own summing up:
- If there is a God, he is perfectly loving.
- If a perfectly loving God exists, reasonable nonbelief does not occur.
- Reasonable nonbelief occurs.
- No perfectly loving God exists (from 2 and 3).
- Hence, there is no God (from 1 and 4).
Schellenberg has stated that this formulation is misleading, when
taken on its own, because it does not make explicit the reason why a
perfectly loving God would want to prevent nonbelief. His deepest claim,
he says, is "about the connection between love and openness to
relationship -- a personal and positively meaningful and explicit sort
of relationship of the sort that logically presupposes each party's
belief in the other's existence." A later presentation of the argument by Schellenberg, which aims at accessibility for students, includes this element:
- If no perfectly loving God exists, then God does not exist.
- If a perfectly loving God exists, then there is a God who is always open to personal relationship with each human person.
- If there is a God who is always open to personal relationship with each human person, then no human person is ever non-resistantly unaware that God exists.
- If a perfectly loving God exists, then no human person is ever non-resistantly unaware that God exists (from 2 and 3).
- Some human persons are non-resistantly unaware that God exists.
- No perfectly loving God exists (from 4 and 5).
- God does not exist (from 1 and 6).
In an article revisiting the argument ten years after it was originally proposed,
Schellenberg observes that criticism has mainly centered around the
idea that God would prevent inculpable nonbelief. He asserts that there
are relatively few criticisms questioning the existence of inculpable
nonbelief, and almost no theistic philosopher objects to the idea that
God is perfectly loving.
God is perfectly loving
Schellenberg
says he has not seen any serious objections to this premise by theistic
philosophers, but there certainly are other conceptions of God. Daniel Howard-Snyder writes about the possibility of believing in an unsurpassably great personal god that is nevertheless dispassionate towards its creatures. Drawing on the Stoic concept of Eudaimonia, he says one can think of a god more akin to a wise sage than the loving parent that Schellenberg envisions.
Theodore Drange, in his attempt to improve the argument (see below),
states that there are many theists who do not view God as perfectly
loving, and "some Christians think of him as an angry deity bent on
punishing people for their sins."
Drange concludes that the argument should be put forward only in
relation to theists who already accept the first premise and believe in a
god who is perfectly loving.
Most theists, in fact, do admit that love is a central concept in almost all of the world's religions. God is often directly associated with love, especially with agape. Theologians such as N.T. Wright suggest that our experience of love is itself a proof of God's existence.
However, there are a few others (e.g. Brian Davies in the Thomist
tradition) who suggest that the modern interpretation of what it means
to say God loves human beings is incorrect, and so that God is able to
be loving in a sense while actually willing disbelief.
Nonresistant nonbelief, lack of evidence, and sin
When asked what he would say when facing God on judgment day, Bertrand Russell
famously replied that he would say "Not enough evidence, God! Not
enough evidence!" Some nonbelievers may have hidden from themselves what
seems to them to be possible evidence of the divine, but the view of
the hiddenness argument is that others have tried hard to believe in
God. Schellenberg addresses this difference with his distinction between
culpable and inculpable nonbelief, with the latter defined as "non-belief that exists through no fault of the non-believer."
Historically, the Calvinist tradition has placed the blame on nonbelievers. Calvin's religious epistemology is based on the sensus divinitatis (Sense of Divinity), the view that the presence of God is universally perceived by all humans. Paul Helm
explains, "Calvin’s use of the term 'sense' signals that the knowledge
of God is a common human endowment; mankind is created not only as
capable of knowing God, but as actually knowing him." According to this tradition, there is no inculpable or nonresistant nonbelief. Jonathan Edwards,
the 18th century American theologian, claimed that while every human
being has been granted the capacity to know God, successful use of these
capacities requires an attitude of "true benevolence", a willingness to
be open to the truth about God. Thus, the failure of non-believers to
see "divine things" is in his view due to "a dreadful stupidity of mind,
occasioning a sottish insensibility of their truth and importance."
Demographics of theism and the problem of natural nonbelief
In modern times, there are fewer proponents of these views. One reason is that, as Stephen Maitzen argues, anthropology
has long established that while religious belief in general is
essentially universal, belief in what Calvin would recognize as God is
very unevenly distributed among cultures (consider for example God in Buddhism, Jain cosmology, or non-theistic animism).
If God exists, then why, Maitzen asks, does the prevalence of belief in
God vary so dramatically with cultural and national boundaries? Jason
Marsh has extended this kind of demographic challenge by focusing on
human evolution and cognitive science of religion. Why is theistic
belief apparently non-existent among early humans but common at later
times, at least in some regions? According to Marsh, the hiddenness
problem is harder to answer once we appreciate that much nonbelief is
'natural', owing to the kinds of minds people naturally possess and to
their place in evolutionary and cultural history.
Another reason why many philosophers no longer attribute
nonbelief to human sinfulness has to do with respect. In fact, modern
critics, such as Howard-Snyder, who praised Schellenberg's book for
being "religiously sensitive," are similarly sensitive towards the nonbeliever. Howard-Snyder wrote:
Even though some nonbelievers lack true benevolence, the empirical evidence strongly suggests that others possess it since they really do earnestly seek the truth about God, love the Good, assess evidence judiciously, and, if anything, display a prejudice for God, not against Him.
Would a perfectly loving God prevent nonresistant nonbelief?
The
most serious criticisms of the hiddenness argument have been leveled
against the idea that a perfectly loving God would prevent nonresistant
nonbelief. Schellenberg argues in two steps, by first claiming that a
loving God would enable humans to partake in a relationship with it, and
then, assuming that belief in that god is a necessary condition for
such relationships to occur, inferring that a loving God would not
permit nonbelief. He states:
There is, first of all, the claim that if there is a personal God who is perfectly loving, creatures capable of explicit and positively meaningful relationship with God, who have not freely shut themselves off from God, are always in a position to participate in such relationship – able to do so just by trying to.
He justifies this claim by arguing that a conception of divine love
can best be formed by extrapolating the best aspects of love in human
relations, and draws an analogy with perfect parental love:
The perfectly loving parent, for example, from the time the child can first respond to her at all until death separates them, will, insofar as she can help it, see to it that nothing she does ever puts relationship with herself out of reach for her child.
But, says Schellenberg, belief in God's existence is necessary for
engaging in such a meaningful relationship with God. He therefore
concludes that if there is a perfectly loving God, such creatures will
always believe in it. He further argues that since belief is
involuntary, these creatures should always have evidence "causally
sufficient" for such belief:
The presence of God will be for them like a light that – however much the degree of its brightness may fluctuate – remains on unless they close their eyes.
Objections and counterarguments
Skeptical theism
Skeptical theism
is the view that we should remain skeptical of claims that our
perceptions about God's purposes can reasonably be considered good
evidence of what they are .
The central thesis of skeptical theism is that it would not be
surprising for an infinitely intelligent and knowledgeable being's
reasons for permitting a perception of evil or alleged hiddenness to be
beyond human comprehension. That is, what is perceived as hiddeness may be necessary for a greater good or to prevent equal or even greater evils.
Schellenberg has responded to skeptical theism (i.e. noseeum/unknown-purpose defense).
First, Schellenberg says that he has given known reasons to think that a
perfectly loving being would always be open to a personal relationship;
therefore, God would not sacrifice some time in the relationship for
the sake of unknown greater goods,
and if the greatest good for finite creatures is to be in a
relationship with God, then God would not sacrifice that for the sake of
unknown greater goods.
Finally, Schellenberg's position is that all known and unknown goods
are ultimately in God; hence, God can bring about unknown greater goods
without hiddenness.
Noseeum defense
The philosophers Michael Bergmann and Michael Rea described the
philosopher William Rowe's justification for the second premise of the
argument from evil, which is equally applicable to a perception of
hiddenness:
Some evidential arguments ... rely on a “noseeum” inference of the following sort: NI: If, after thinking hard, we can’t think of any God-justifying reason for permitting some horrific evil then it is likely that there is no such reason. (The reason NI is called a ‘noseeum’ inference is that it says, more or less, that because we don’t see ‘um, they probably ain’t there.)
Various
analogies are offered to show that the noseeum inference is logically
unsound. For example, a novice chess player's inability to discern a
chess master's choice of moves cannot be used to infer that there is no
good reason for the move.
The skeptical theist and noseum defense place the burden of proof on
the atheist to prove that their intuitions about God are trustworthy.
Unreasonable demands on God
This
argument is sometimes seen as demanding God to prove his existence, for
example by performing miracles. Critics have argued that even in
Schellenberg's more refined version, the nonbeliever is imposing her own
epistemological
expectations on the will of God. A detailed discussion of these kinds
of demands, and their moral and spiritual implications, is provided by Paul Moser, who says that such demands amount to cognitive idolatry. He defines idolatry
as "our not letting the true God be Lord in our lives" and instead
committing to something other than God by pursuing a quest for
self-realization in our own terms. If this is idolatry in our actions,
then idolatry in our knowing, he says, is as follows:
Cognitive idolatry relies on a standard for knowledge that excludes the primacy of the morally self-transforming knowledge of God central to knowing God as Lord. It rests on an epistemological standard, whether empiricist, rationalist, or some hybrid, that does not let God be Lord. Such idolatry aims to protect one's lifestyle from serious challenge by the God who calls, convicts, and reconciles. It disallows knowledge of God as personal subject and Lord to whom we are morally and cognitively responsible. It allows at most for knowledge of God as an undemanding object of human knowledge.
Schellenberg considers this criticism irrelevant to the argument,
which in his opinion, does not impose any demands for demonstrations of
God's power, but rather looks for evidence that "need only be such as
will be causally sufficient for belief in the absence of resistance...
This result might be effected through the much more spiritually
appropriate means of religious experience, interpreted in the sensitive
manner of a Pascal or a Kierkegaard."
Schellenberg then expresses a certain frustration that theistic writers
who otherwise extol the value of religious experiences deny non-theists
the right to do so.
Soul-making theodicy
John Hick used the term "soul-making" in his theodicy Evil and the God of Love
to describe the kind of spiritual development that he believes
justifies the existence of evil. This defense is employed by Michael
Murray,
who explains how, in his view, divine hiddenness is essential to
soul-making. It may seem that it is not hard to imagine a world where
God is known and yet believers act freely with ample opportunities for
spiritual development. But Murray gives a deep and careful analysis of
the argument, concluding that if God's existence were revealed in such a
way as to remove reasonable non-belief, then "any desire that we might
have to believe or act in ways contrary to that which has been revealed
would be overwhelmed."
Critics note here that, for example, in Christianity (and even
more in Judaism, where God is represented as talking to Job and
explaining why he is just), God is already believed to have exposed
himself very distinctly: for example to the Apostles who saw his
resurrection. One theistic explanation of this might be that God knows
some people would not believe anyway but if God knows this before
creating, there is a problem about God's liability for what is created.
More fundamentally in relation to Murray's argument, there is the
problem for orthodox believers of explaining the existence of Satan, a
fallen angel who is obviously aware of God and yet, according to
theistic scriptures, freely chose to rebel against God.
Unknown purpose defense
Alvin Plantinga
writes that the statement "We can see no good reason for God to do X"
only implies "There is no good reason for God to do X" on the assumption
that "If there were a good reason for God to do X, we would be able to
see it," which he suggests is absurd.
This point might be applied to versions of the argument from nonbelief
that suggest without support that there is no good reason for God to
permit nonbelief.
There really are no atheists defense
This
is the argument that all true atheists are at heart lying so that they
may live in a way that is contrary to God's commands (as seen in
particular interpretations of Romans 1:18-25). Critics note that there
are atheists who are not lying and are not using their atheism as an
escape to sin. Proponents note, however, that they could just as easily
still be lying, perhaps not to others anymore but themselves (i.e.
loving the wrong woman argument).
Some have claimed this argument, however, fails to account for Stephen
Maitzen's point on the demographics of theism. If all atheists are
liars, why are people in some societies so much more likely to lie than
in others?
Finally, some have also claimed this argument fails to account for
Jason Marsh's point on natural nonbelief in early humans. Since there
was quite plausibly such a thing as natural nonbelief in early humans,
then it does not make much sense to say that said nonbelief is
self-deceptive. That is because natural nonbelief entails nonresistant
nonbelief.
Drange's argument from nonbelief
Theodore
Drange proposed a version of the nonbelief argument in 1996. He
considers the distinction between culpable and inculpable nonbelief to
be unhelpful in the argument, arguing instead that the mere existence of
nonbelief is evidence against the existence of God. A semi-formal
presentation of the argument is as follows:
- If God exists, God:
- wants all humans to believe God exists before they die;
- can bring about a situation in which all humans believe God exists before they die;
- does not want anything that would conflict with and be at least as important as its desire for all humans to believe God exists before they die; and
- always acts in accordance with what it most wants.
- If God exists, all humans would believe so before they die (from 1).
- But not all humans believe God exists before they die.
- Therefore, God does not exist (from 2 and 3).
Drange's argument is directed primarily to Christians, and the
philosopher Laura Garcia has replied from that perspective. She says
that Drange's argument hinges on the idea that belief in God's existence
is, according to Christians, necessary for salvation. According to
Garcia this idea is mistaken: "many Christians deny this claim and the
Catholic Church explicitly rejects it."
But as Garcia notes, Drange has answered that for many Christians—in
particular, evangelical Christians—his point should remain convincing,
and that there are in any case other good things that belief in God can
bring for humans, which a good God would desire, such as peace of mind
and a sense of meaning in life.