| (continued)
Self-Refuting Nature of Pantheism. Pantheism
is self-refuting, at least all forms that claim individuality
is an illusion caused by my mind. For according to pantheism,
individual minds are themselves aspects of the illusion and can
therefore provide no basis for explaining it. If the mind is part of
the illusion, it cannot be the ground for explaining the illusion.
Hence, if pantheism is true in asserting that my individuality is an
illusion, then pantheism is false, since there is then no basis for
explaining the illusion.
Pantheism also fails to handle the problem of evil
in a satisfactory manner. To pronounce evil an illusion or as less
than real is not only frustrating and hollow to those experiencing
evil, but it seems philosophically inadequate. If evil is not real,
then what is the origin of the illusion? Why have people experienced
it for so long, and why does it seem so real? Despite the
pantheist’s claim to the contrary, he or she also experiences
pain, suffering, and eventually will die. Even pantheists
double-over in pain when they get appendicitis. They jump out of the
way of an on-coming truck so as not to get hurt.
If God is all, and all is God, as pantheists
maintain, then evil is an illusion and ultimately there are no
rights and wrongs. For there are four possibilities regarding good
and evil:
1. If God is all-good, then evil must exist apart
from God. But this is impossible since God is all—nothing can
exist apart from It.
2. If God is all-evil, then good must exist apart
from God. This is not possible either since God is all.
3. God is both all-good and all-evil. This cannot
be, for it is self-contradictory to affirm that the same being is
both all good and all evil at the same time. Further, most
pantheists agree that God is beyond good and evil. Therefore God is
neither good nor evil.
4. Good and evil are illusory. They are not real
categories.
Option four is what most pantheists believe. But
if evil is only an illusion, then ultimately there is no such thing
as good and evil thoughts or actions. Hence, what difference would
it make whether we praise or curse, counsel or rape, love or murder
someone? If there is no final moral difference between those
actions, absolute moral responsibilities do not exist. Cruelty and
non-cruelty are ultimately the same. One critic made the point with
this illustration:
One day I was talking to a group of
people in the digs of a young South African in Cambridge. Among
others, there was present a young Indian who was of Sikh background
but a Hindu by religion. He started to speak strongly against
Christianity, but did not really understand the problems of his own
beliefs. So I said, "Am I not correct in saying that on the
basis of your system, cruelty and non-cruelty are ultimately equal,
that there is no intrinsic difference between them?" He
agreed…. The student in whose room we met, who had clearly
understood the implications of what the Sikh had admitted, picked up
his kettle of boiling water with which he was about to make tea, and
stood with it steaming over the Indian’s head. The man looked up
and asked him what he was doing and he said, with a cold yet gentle
finality, "There is no difference between cruelty and
non-cruelty." Thereupon the Hindu walked out into the night.
[Schaeffer, The God Who Is There, 101]
If pantheists are correct that reality is not
moral, that good and evil, right and wrong, are inapplicable to what
is, then to be right is as meaningless as to be wrong (Schaeffer, He
Is There and He Is Not Silent). The foundation for morality is
destroyed. Pantheism does not take the problem of evil seriously. As
C. S. Lewis put it, "If you do not take the distinctions
between good and bad seriously, then it is easy to say that anything
you find in this world is a part of God. But, of course, if you
think some things really bad, and God really good, then you cannot
talk like that" (Mere Christianity, 30).
In this and other ways, the pantheistic concept of
God is incoherent. To say God is infinite, yet somehow shares his
being (ex deo) with creation, is to raise the problem of how
the finite can be infinite, which is what absolute pantheists say.
Otherwise, one must consider the finite world less than real, though
existing. We have seen the problems with the first, absolute option.
But the second option makes God both infinite and finite, for it is
said to share part of its being with creatures which entails an
Infinite Being becoming less than infinite. But how can the Infinite
be finite, the Absolute be relative, and the Unchanging changed?
Pantheism’s God also is unknowable. The very
claim, "God is unknowable in an intellectual way," seems
either meaningless or self-defeating. For if the claim itself cannot
be understood in an intellectual way, then it is self-defeating. For
what is being affirmed is that nothing can be understood about God
in an intellectual way. But the pantheist expects us to
intellectually know this truth that God cannot be understood in an
intellectual way. In other words, the pantheist appears to be making
a statement about God to the effect that no such statements can be
made about God. But how can one make a positive affirmation about
God which claims that only negative affirmations can be made about
God? Plotinus admitted that negative knowledge presupposes some
positive awareness. Otherwise, one would not know what to negate.
Critics further claim that the denial of many
pantheists of the applicability of logic to reality is
self-defeating. For to deny that logic applies to reality, it would
seem that one must make a logical statement about reality to the
effect that no logical statements can be made. For example, when Zen
Buddhist D. T. Suzuki says that to comprehend life we must abandon
logic (Suzuki, 58), he uses logic in his affirmation and applies it
to reality. Indeed, the law of noncontradiction (A cannot both be A
and not A) cannot be denied without using it in the very denial.
Therefore, to deny that logic applies to reality, one must not make
a logical statement about reality. But then how will the position be
defended?
Sources
Bhagavad-Gita, Prabhavananda,
trans., with C. Usherwood; see esp. Appen. 2: "The Gita and
War"
D. K. Clark, The
Pantheism of Alan Watts
D. K. Clark, Apologetics in the
New Age
G. H. Clark, Thales to
Dewey
W. Corduan, "Transcendentalism: Hegel,"
in N. L. Geisler, ed., Biblical Errancy: An
Analysis of Its Philosophical Roots
R. Flint, Anti-Theistic
Theories
0. Guiness, The Dust of
Death
S. Hackett, Oriental
Philosophy
G. W. F. Hegel, The
Phenomenology of Mind
C. S. Lewis, Mere
Christianity
H. P. Owen, Concepts of
Deity
Plotinus, Enneads
Prabhavananda, The
Spiritual Heritage of India
____________, The Upanishads: Breath of the
Eternal, F. Manchester, trans.
S. Radhakrishnan, The
Hindu View of Life
J. M. Robinson, An
Introduction to Early Greek Philosophy
F. Schaeffer, He Is There
and He Is Not Silent
__________, The God Who Is There
H. Smith, The Religions
of Man
B. Spinoza, Ethics
D. T. Suzuki, An
Introduction to Zen Buddhism
|