# William Lane Craig vs Alex O'Connor: God and Suffering

## Метаданные

- **Канал:** Alex O'Connor
- **YouTube:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OEBTtMjm_4U
- **Дата:** 21.05.2026
- **Длительность:** 1:50:56
- **Просмотры:** 214,006
- **Источник:** https://ekstraktznaniy.ru/video/51899

## Описание

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 - VIDEO NOTES

This event took place on the 5th of May 2026 at the Royal Institution. William Lane Craig and Alex discuss the kalam cosmological argument, whether the universe had a beginning, Hilbert's Hotel, and the problem of animal suffering.

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## Транскрипт

### Segment 1 (00:00 - 05:00) []

And please welcome to the stage BBC's New Generation Thinker 2024. He's appeared on Jubilee Surrounded and the Joe Rogan podcast. When he walks in with an itty bitty waist and that round thing in your face, you get sprung. Dr. Jack SS. Welcome. We're on. Welcome. Welcome everybody. Thank you so much for being here. You need to stop saying things like that, Paul. The star. They're getting worse. I don't know. I need to stop upsetting you so much. Welcome here to the beautiful Royal Institution Theater for The Question of God. I had the absolute pleasure of co-producing this evening for the first time. And in my place, my very good friend and the wonderful Johnny Thompson will be hosting tonight's panel. There are so many people working behind the scenes to make tonight possible. So before I invite our guests onto the stage, please join me in giving a huge round of applause to everybody working here at the theater, thank you so much for making it possible. Thank you. All right, we have two fan favorites, returning guests here at the theater. We know you're big fans of them as well, hence why the theater is absolutely packed this evening. Dr. Craig and Alex O'Connor joining us again. When they come on stage, please give them a massive round of applause, especially because Johnny Thompson's here with us for the first time. So, without further ado, Dr. William Lane Craig, Johnny Thompson, and Alex O' CONOR. Thank you. What a warm welcome. Brilliant. Thank you. Good evening and welcome to this beautiful venue where we will be talking about theology, philosophy, and religious belief. I am Johnny Thompson and tonight I'm inviting two wonderful guests to explore the question of God for us all here tonight. On my right is a man who has for 40 years made the philosophical case for Christian theism the central project of his life. He's debated more atheists in more universities than perhaps anyone alive. And somewhere in the middle of all that, he's revived a medieval cosmological argument that has been gathering dust since the 12th century and turned it into one of the most discussed arguments in the contemporary philosophy of religion. He is now working on a five volume systematic philosophical theology. Having settled the question of if God exists, he is turning to the question of what God is like. Please welcome William Lane Craig. And on my left is a man who picked up some of those arguments as a teenager in Oxford and took them seriously, took them apart, and somewhere along the way became one of the most watched philosophers of his generation. He's the host of the Within reason podcast where he has interviewed the likes of Richard Dawkins, Jordan Peterson, Sam Harris, Slavo Zjek, and of course the man sitting opposite him tonight. He describes himself as an agnostic atheist, but a curious one, increasingly drawn to the figure of Jesus and increasingly suspicious of the idea that the truth of things can be exhausted by argument alone. He is the rare treat of someone who welcomes discussion and dialectic rather than point scoring and argument. Please welcome Alex Okconor. So without any more preamble, we're going to dive into the meat of the issue tonight. And the first question is a big one. It's for you, Dr. Craig. Should we believe in God? And why? — Okay. Well, I'd like to begin uh by explaining why I am so truly glad to be here this evening. This event comes midway through a speaking tour of England. And after the events on Saturday, I came down with severe laryngitis, completely lost my voice, and it looked like the rest of the tour was in jeopardy. In fact, the events in Durham had to be cancelled. But I want to publicly express my gratitude to our dear friends uh Dr. Peter and Heather May in Southampton who were able to procure for us a doctor here in London who actually made a house call early

### Segment 2 (05:00 - 10:00) [5:00]

Monday morning to our hotel and after looking at us uh he wrote some prescriptions for medications uh that put me on the road to recovery thereby certainly saving the event tonight uh as well as hopefully the remainder of the tour. So I am really glad to be with you. Now uh with respect to our time this evening um this is not going to be a debate between Alex and me. Rather this is going to be a conversation where we openly discuss these issues. Pardon me. I'd probably be coughing. Uh, but I've got my tea, got my throat lozenes here, and so I think we're going to have a great time. And um, philosophers like to make distinctions in answering questions. So when Johnny asks, "What reasons are there to believe in God? " It's important to distinguish between believing in God and believing that God exists. Believing in God means trusting in God, committing one's life to God and worship and love and obedience. And the reason you should do that is obvious because God is the supreme uh benefactor. He is the source of eternal life, the source of forgiveness and salvation. So clearly you should believe in God. But I think Johnny's real question is, well, but why believe that God exists? You can't believe in God if you don't believe that God exists. And in my philosophical work, I've defended both what I call exterior and interior ways of answering that question. Exterior arguments and evidences concern uh philosophical uh and scientific arguments that uh lead to the existence of God. For example, I've defended six of these in my work. First, that God is the best explanation of why anything at all exists rather than nothing. Second, that God is the best explanation for the absolute beginning of the universe at a point in the finite past. Thirdly, God is the best explanation for the uncanny applicability of mathematics to the physical phenomena. Fourth, God is the best explanation for the incomprehensible fine-tuning of the universe for embodied interactive life. Fifth, God is the best explanation for the objectivity of moral values and duties in the world. And finally, sixth, the very possibility of God's existence uh implies that God exists. Now together I think these six arguments constitute a powerful cumulative case that God exists. If you were to ask me why I believe the Christian God exists, then we would need to go beyond these arguments to examine the person of Jesus of Nazareth. Who was this man Jesus of Nazareth? And I believe that he uh claimed to be um the long- awaited Jewish Messiah, the son of God in a unique sense, and the divine human son of man prophesied by the prophet Daniel. And I think that God vindicated those radical personal claims by which he put himself in God's place by raising him from the dead. Now, I realize that most people think that the resurrection of Jesus is something you just believe in by faith or not, but in fact, there are uh four um wellestablished historical facts concerning the fate of Jesus of Nazareth that are agreed upon by the vast majority of New Testament scholars that have written on this subject. And these would include first uh his honorable interament by Joseph of Arythea in a tomb following his crucifixion. Secondly, the tomb was discovered on the first day of the week following the crucifixion by a group of Jesus female followers to be empty. Third, the uh uh rather various individuals and groups of people

### Segment 3 (10:00 - 15:00) [10:00]

experienced appearances of Jesus alive after his death on various indivi uh various occasions and under a variety of circumstances. And finally, number four is that the original disciples suddenly and sincerely came to believe that God had raised Jesus from the dead despite every predisposition to the contrary. And I think that when the alternative explanations for those facts are weighed by the usual criteria that historians use for evaluating historical hypotheses, then the superiority and plausibility of what I call the resurrection hypothesis emerges. that is that the original disciples were right that God had raised Jesus from the dead and so for that reason I am enthusiastically a Christian theist now so much for the exterior way um down through history most Christians haven't believed in God on that basis the vast majority of Christians like a medieval peasant farmer or uh someone working in the rice fields of Laos uh don't have the education or the library resources or the leisure time to look into philosophical arguments for God's existence or the evidence for the New Testament. Rather, they believe in God on the basis of a personal experience of God himself. Uh in particular, they've experienced the risen Lord in their lives. The Easter hymwriter says, "Have you ask me how I know he lives? He lives within my heart. " And I think that is a perfectly valid way. So even though I am an enthusiastic proponent of evidentiary exterior arguments for the truth of Christian faith, I don't think they're necessary. I think that it's perfectly rational to take belief in Christianity as a properly basic belief grounded in our personal experience of God himself. — Thank you very much. There's a lot there to unpack and we'll park for the moment, Alex, any arguments you might have against the existence of God and we'll park also for the moment the question of Jesus and of Christianity. — I was wondering if you might be able to tackle first — what Dr. Craig calls the exterior arguments for God particularly what sounds like you said five ways — six — particularly like a version of cosmological argument that he raised at the beginning — I think the five ways was somebody else yeah — yeah of course an atheist engaged in these discussions spends their time doing two things providing positive reasons not to believe in God and there's really only one popular version of that but more often for that reason they spend their time responding to arguments that are put forward. So Dr. Craig has put forth uh six of these and the atheist job is to see whether they think that the these arguments essentially hold. So for example, Dr. Craig says that God is the best explanation of the finite past of the universe, the fact that the universe had a beginning at a moment in time. And the questions that need to be asked in response to that are did the universe have a beginning? How would we know that it had a beginning? If it had a beginning, how do we know that it needs some kind of cause? And Dr. Craig is perhaps most famous for his calam cosmological argument which seeks to establish these facts that everything which begins to exist has a cause that the universe had a beginning and that therefore the universe had some kind of cause and if the universe is the totality of all spaceime and matter then the cause of the universe must be spaceless, timeless, immaterial and so on. Most attention in this argument is given to the second premise that is that the universe began to exist. Now some of you may be under the apprehension that big bang cosmology tells us from a scientific perspective that the universe had a first moment. That is not true. The evidence for the big bang is evidence that sometime around 14 billion years ago all of spaceime was condensed into a really hot, really dense state. In order to get to a first moment of the universe, you need to take the observations which show that the universe is expanding, reverse them to get to the hot dense state and then keep going past the hot dense state. And this is what Hawking and Penrose, Steven Hawking and Roger Penrose did in the 20th century to show that the at the beginning of the universe there was what was called a singularity. This is a genuine first moment where density goes to infinity on some models and this would be a first moment for the universe. I just want to point out for

### Segment 4 (15:00 - 20:00) [15:00]

those who are scientifically minded here um that Roger Penrose and Stephen Hawking relied on some assumptions in order to extrapolate in that manner. Four assumptions in particular all of which have been you okay all of which I I have hay fever. I suppose we've all got some um all of which have been uh disputed by physicists including Penrose and Hawking themselves who've disputed who've since disputed the very assumptions they relied upon to point to a singularity and in fact my friend Phil Halper who was never far away from these discussions either intellectually or physically. Hi Phil uh conducted a survey recently, two of them actually. Uh the most recent one I believe the largest collection of physicists ever surveyed um or at least it was replicated and the survey asked a number of questions to leading experts and the only question that got majority consensus and about twothirds the only one was that the big bang is not the first moment of the universe. It is a hot dense state 14 billion years ago. We don't know if or what came before that horse. It's simply not something that we can measure. So scientifically, we're not on sort of solid ground. But Dr. Craig is more fond, I think, of putting forward philosophical reasons why the universe must have had a beginning. And these rely on the impossibility of an actual infinite. that if the universe had an infinite past, that would mean that you would have had to traverse an infinite number of moments in order to get to the present. I think I'm fair in saying that this is one version of the of an argument you would give to say why we would say that the universe has a finite past is that yeah, I mean, and plausibly in order to get to the present, you have to complete the past. But if the past is infinite, you'd have to complete an infinite series. You can't do that. And so you would never arrive at the present. And yet here we are at the present. Therefore, the universe had to have had some kind of beginning. There are other reasons to think that infinities of this kind can't uh obtain in reality. Dr. Craig is famous for relying upon David Hilbert's famous analogy or imagery of an infinite hotel, a hotel with an infinite number of rooms and all of those rooms are full. And yet, if somebody showed up to this infinite hotel and desired a room and were told that every single room in the hotel was full, it's easy. All you have to do is tell the person in room number one to move to room number two. That one's occupied. So person in room number two moves to room number three and number three moves to four and four to five and so on and everyone just moves up and since it's an infinite hotel there's always a next number for them to move into and then the new guest just moves into room number one and so as Craig has sometimes put in the past the hotel would have to have a sign outside that says no vacancy rooms available which of course seems like a contradiction. I think that man is the one who needs the cup of tea. — He never he he never likes when you talk about this. — My sympathies. — It's um yeah, I mean it's it's horrific stuff losing your faith in real time. It can make anybody a bit sick. Um the the problem I see with this is that it relies upon a do we are we um as much as I care about Johnny. Can we put him on mute? I'm sure. And actually you could just leave him on mute for the rest of the evening. Um the problem is that these assumptions are based on intuition. It seems as though this idea that the hotel will be full and also be able to accept new guests seems like a contradiction, but it's simply not a contradiction. I mean, there are two ways in which we could understand the hotel being full. Either full means that it can take no more guests in which case Hilbert's hotel simply isn't full because it can take new guests. So maybe by full what we mean is every room is occupied. That's fine. Okay, every room is occupied, but you can also acquire new guests. That's true even in non- infinite examples. Like if I had a finite hotel and every single room was full, but if a new guest came into the room uh into the hotel, I could just build a new room for them. I could say no vacancy, you know, like at least every room is full and yet new guests can be admitted. So the idea that every room being full and it being impossible to admit new guests are the same thing is not true, even trivially

### Segment 5 (20:00 - 25:00) [20:00]

in the case of that finite hotel. But because we're so used to them coming together, it seems that when they don't, we're in some unintuitive contradiction. But I don't think idea like concepts like Hilbert Hotel are contradictory so much as they're simply unintuitive. And bear in mind that when we are forced into extreme philosophical circumstances, we are very often asked to give up some of our most foundational intuitions. The Christian asks us to believe that God is one and yet three at the same time, which many people find profoundly unintuitive and most of the time is defended as a kind of mystery of faith that we'll never properly understand. We have to put our intuitions on the shelf and accept that this must be true. In the quantum realm, we're told that particles can be particles and waves at the same time. that superp position is a thing that that people that things can be in the same place so that two things can be this the same place at one time all kinds of assumptions that don't seem to make sense now I think that infinity is surely one of the kinds of pressures that we would expect to upset our intuitions in that regard on the point of the finite universe could the universe have an infinite past I really like this thought about having to traverse an actually infinite number of moments in order to get to the present. Right? This is my favorite argument because it's just so intuitive. How could we arrive at the present if you had to complete an infinite to get to the present? My question is this. An infinite number of what? Because of course potential infinites. Jacks, ladies and gentlemen. — Oh, hello. I uh I'm on, aren't I? I uh I poisoned Johnny Thompson so I could get my seat back as host. Works out pretty well. For the sake of the footage, Johnny Thompson's just aged about 10 years. I am sorry, Alex. You were saying — that's okay. Um an infinite number of what? Because it seems intuitive. You know, I was writing about the Kalam cosmological argument recently and I was trying to defend it and I found myself saying in order to get to the present, you would have to surpass an infinite number of And then I stopped and I thought, well, what works there? — Events. — Maybe events. What's an event? I mean, okay. So, so I pick up this glass. That's an event. But that event can be subdivided. It's the event of my cognizing the glass and moving my arm and lifting it up and the friction between the fingers and the cup. Okay. So, so maybe just the event of, you know, the friction rubbing against the cup. But that event occurs across a period of time and it can be further subdivided into individual moments. Like events can always be subdivided into smaller events as long as they persist through time. You can keep dividing the time in half and say that it's made up of further moments. Okay, so maybe like moments then. But what's a moment? Like what are we actually talking about here? Are we talking about maybe we're talking about some measure of time? Maybe we would say something like well um take seconds, you know, or hours. That's fine. Maybe an infinite number of hours. What's an hour? Of course, an hour is ultimately based on our like orbiting around the sun, but you could say, "Okay, but if the sun disappeared, we could still keep counting as if it were there and keep the timer going. " Except for the fact that time doesn't work like that, and time doesn't flow at the same rate at every point in the universe. In fact, the people sat on the bottom row down here are aging more slowly than the people at top. Congratulations. As Einstein showed us. And so I'm actually not entirely sure what things we're talking about that would need to be infinite and therefore um unable to obtain in reality in order to have an infinite past. Now don't get me wrong, I understand the intuition. It still seems like a hard pill to swallow that the universe might have been past infinite. But it's a pill that many people swallow. Not discluding by the way a certain Greek marble sculpture you may have heard of called Aristotle who himself made this important distinction between actual and potential infinities and thought that actual infinities was something that couldn't obtain in reality and yet Aristotle believed that the universe had an eternal past. He believed that part the past stretched infinitely um well it stretched infinitely into the past that the universe did. And so it seems to me unclear. here. I mean that the two assumptions built into that particular point in other words are that actual infinities are impossible and that a past infinite universe would count as an actual infinity. Dr. Craig I also know is a proponent of the a theory of time and there are broadly speaking two but there are more but people talk about two. There's this a theory of time. The present is all that exists. The past does not exist. The future does not exist. All that exists is the present moment. I also have some trouble with that because I don't know what the present moment like is. I don't know when it occurs or how long it lasts. It's very difficult to actually pin that down. It's like an infinitely thin

### Segment 6 (25:00 - 30:00) [25:00]

barrier between the past and the present. It's very hard to pin down. The other theory is the B theory of time which says that time is a dimension of space. Many people interpret Einstein's relativity in this way. I know that Dr. Craig does not. Um and in doing so is in the minority of interpreters of general relativity in um in supporting a neolencian interpretation of general relativity. Now, — Neil Loren. — Yes. — Which retains the idea of an absolute um an absolute — time? Um I I'm not convinced, in other words, that Why did I bring up general relativity? Why was I just talking about it? — I wanted to There's two things at the beginning what you were saying. — Why was I talking about it? — I don't know. I've just got here. got here. — Johnny would have known. Johnny, are you listening? — Johnny's not with us anymore. — I can't remember where I was going with that. — Johnny's in a cupboard. cupboard. If I don't jump into this conversation, let's have it — soon. I'm going to forget. — Yeah. — All that's Can I remind just two things at the beginning? — Oh, sorry. A theory and b just really quickly. theory. Very simple. Um if the past does not exist, as Dr. Craig believes that it does not, the only thing that really exists is the present moment. Then to say that the past is an actual infinite seems at least not obvious to me. The future doesn't exist. The future is a potential infinite because you keep counting into the future on and on and on with no end. There's no point at which it's completed and exists as a whole. That would be an actual infinite and that would be paradoxical. But it doesn't exist yet. Now, it's complicated by the fact that the past sort of has already existed in the past. But it doesn't exist right now. If the past doesn't exist, it seems strange to me to suggest that we can count it as this sort of boxed off thing that we can point to and cool and actually infinite sort of set of things. In other words, I don't know what a moment is. I don't know why an actual inf infinity is necessarily contradictory. And even if it's deeply unintuitive, sometimes in unusual circumstances, we're asked to abandon our intuitions. And it wouldn't surprise me if in the case of the infinity, this would be one of them. — Two things in there I think important, Bill. One is Alex gave a sort of Zenos paradox sort of thing when you were saying I don't know what a moment is and you can sort of keep breaking it up into little parts. That's one sort of infinite infinity argument. And the second one was does it make sense to have an infinite chain that expands the other way? And so do you want to say something like — is time isn't infinitely divisible and second how do you explain if there is an infinite chain do you want to say there's a first cause to that as well? How do you explain the infinite chain? Well, I think it's more important, uh, Jack, to back up and assess the accuracy of Alex's summary of the arguments, uh, because I think a lot of the quibble here is merely semantic — uh, rather than substantive. Now, as Alex Helix correctly suggested, the most controversial premise of the Kalam cosmological argument is the premise the universe began to exist. And in support of this premise, I offer two philosophical arguments which Alex distinguished but perhaps not clearly enough. The first one is based upon the impossibility of an actually infinite number of things. While the concept of actual infinity seems to be a perfectly consistent mathematical concept, once you try to instantiate that in the real world, it results in all sorts of I think truly intolerable uh situations that suggest that an actually infinite number of things can't act really exist. The second argument is independent of that first argument. doesn't deny that an actually infinite number of things can exist but rather says that an actually infinite number of things cannot be formed by successive addition and this is the connection with the xenop paradoxes that you mentioned Jack the uh version of Zeno's paradox is called the dichotomy says that Before Achilles can cross the stadium, he has to cross halfway. But before he can cross halfway, he has to cross a quarter way. Before he can cross a quarter way, he has to cross an eighth of the way. And so on had infinitum. The implication is that poor Achilles cannot even move because before he moved any distance, he would already have to have moved half of that distance. And therefore, Zeno concluded that if reality is made up of these sorts of uh intervals that motion is impossible, which is absurd because obviously motion exists. Now this

### Segment 7 (30:00 - 35:00) [30:00]

version of the Kam cosmological argument is just like the dichotomy paradox except you pull out the initial point — because Achilles has a starting point but an infinite past as incomprehensible as this seems has no starting point. So you just mathematically you pluck out that initial point and push it back to infinity. Instead of descending intervals like 1/2, 1/4, 1/8, you make all the intervals equal and they go back to infinity without beginning. And that does nothing to suggest how that infinite past could have been traversed one interval at a time. Now, Alex, you ask, well, what are those things that are traversed? And I interjected, they're events. And in my work, I discuss this. What is an event? It's a type of change. And to make sure that all of the events are actual and equal, we arbitrarily conventionally specify some chosen event as our standard event, say one hour or one day. And then we ask how many standard intervals are there in a beginningless past? And the answer can only be an actually infinite number of such events. And these events don't all have to exist at the same time. Um these events have been instantiated in reality like a falling series of dominoes. That's the analogy I also like. a falling series of dominoes. The last domino falls today, but there was never a first domino. It's been beginningless. And so you can specify a certain standard event arbitrarily and then ask how many have elapsed and the answer will be actually infinite. So um that would suggest that an actually infinite past cannot elapse. Now, you're quite right, Alex, in saying that Aristotle nevertheless believed in an eternal beginningless universe, but he said the past is not actually infinite, but potentially infinite. — But here, I think Aristotle was clearly conceptually mistaken. Um an actual infinite is a collection which is complete. All of its members uh are in that collection. But a potential infinite is a series that is at every point finite but indefinitely increasing toward infinity is a limit which it endlessly approaches but never arrives at. So if the series of events in time is endless and will go on forever, the series of events later than any moment in time would clearly be merely potentially infinite. New events are added with each successive moment, but you never arrive at an actual infinity of events. By contrast, if you look at the series of events in the earlier than direction, that cannot be potentially infinite because in that case, the past would be finite but growing toward infinity in a backward direction which contradicts the forward uh flow of time. So I don't think that those answers to the calam cosmological argument are at all convincing. Now in addition to these two philosophical arguments, I was stunned to discover in my work at the University of Birmingham uh in my doctoral work that there are actually two scientific confirmations of the beginning of the universe. And notice the terminology I use there. Um, scientific results are always provisional. They're never certain. But we have these good philosophical, metaphysical arguments for the finitude of the past. And what contemporary science does is it confirms those arguments. That is to say, the hypothesis that the universe began to exist is much more probable given the contemporary evidence of astrophysics than it was without it. And so this is not refuted, Alex, by the survey

### Segment 8 (35:00 - 40:00) [35:00]

you mentioned — where the scientists said that the big bang refers to this early hot dense state, not to the initial singularity. That's a merely semantic point. That is just saying that the label the big bang that label is given to this earlier hot dense state. it's not the label of the singularity and that's quite true but that isn't to deny the reality of the singularity or to say that it didn't occur. Hawking and Penrose whom you mention uh in their 1996 book state and if I can quote from memory today almost everyone believes that the universe and time itself had a beginning in the big bang. So um the finitude of the past let me now add an additional point doesn't require a singular beginning in the universe. — Hawking and Hartull James Hartle of University of California Santa Barbara offered a quantum physical model of the universe that resolved the singularity. they were able to round off that initial uh space-time uh segment of the universe so that there is no singular point like a cone has a point in which it cannot be extended that's where the point is a cone can be extended in the other direction and the standard big bang model has the geometry of a cone but the hard hawking model got rid of that initial point by rounding it off through the use of imaginary numbers for the time coordinate. So their model has a finite past, a beginning of the universe, but is singularity free. And so don't think that my argument for the finitude of the past, the beginning in the universe on the basis of astrophysical cosmology or big bang theory assumes that it has to be a singular beginning. There are plenty of non-s singular models with beginnings. So that would be the first body of evidence is this astrophysical evidence from the expansion of the universe. But then very quickly go — the second scientific confirmation that I don't think you mentioned — is the evidence stemming out of the thermodynamic properties of the universe. — The universe on a large scale is simply a gigantic closed system because on naturalism that's all there is and there isn't anything outside of it. So if it were infinite in the past um its entropy production should have increased and increased so that it would now be in a dark dilute uh and lifeless state. — And since we are not in such a state we know that the universe must have had a beginning in which it was in a low entropy state. extraordinarily low and has since been increasing in entropy a as it's endured. And this is called the past hypothesis. — So it would be in a state of heat death if it was the case it was — in if it was con in pre-relativistic physics this was called the heat death of the universe. Yes. But in relativistic physics, uh, the heat death could be either cold or hot depending on whether the universe will expand forever or will hot or cold. It's not a good thing. Okay, good. Alex, quite a bit for you to say. I find with these discussions, — I got — Well, you mentioned so much to respond to, but you're right. We don't I do want to respond though to the point about metaphysical intuitions and the trinity at some point. — That's important. We'll get to that perhaps. Um I also want to make sure that we have time to talk about the proactive case against God's existence which is equally important to this discussion. But the calam is is your ground Dr. Craig. Um yes I was with a friend who was yesterday who smokes cigarettes and I realized that if you wanted to if you want to give up smoking all you have to do is just take the remainder of your tobacco and just smoke half of the remaining tobacco every single day. and that way you'll never run out. Um, but you'll never have to buy anymore. Of course, constantly dividing in this sense has been problematic for thousands of years and has prompted lots of people to develop metaphysical positions on, for example, um, time being discreet. You know, if you need, which is in fact true, to half the distance between here

### Segment 9 (40:00 - 45:00) [40:00]

and here in order to clap, you have to half it first, again, you have to half it again. Many people say that there therefore must be some kind of ultimately small kind of distance. But for our discussion, this would be an example of a potential infinite. We're constantly dividing, dividing, dividing. And as we well know that infinite series can just be completed. You can prove that just by clapping your hands. Docs Craig said that in order to define what an event is, you just sort of arbitrarily pick a moment of uh sort of duration of time and just count how many of those there have been. For example, hours. But the point is that there is no such thing as an objective hour. There's the length of an hour. I mean this seriously. If you when satellites were first sent into orbit around this planet, scientists of general relativity told the technicians and the companies that the clocks will literally run at a different rate because of the effects of uh earth's mass on the ticking of time. And the government didn't believe them. And so the original satellites were sent up with two clocks. One which is in accordance with general relativity and the sort of common sensical view that time ticks normally for everybody no matter where you are. And guess who was right? It was the government. I'm just kidding. It was the scientists. Time doesn't tick consistently in this way. And so to sort of pick an arbitrary length of time like an hour and just say that that's something that will have gone on infinitely into the past. I just don't think that's how time works. And I don't think that like metaphysically speaking to call that an event makes much sense. I mean like you just you said that the problem with Aristotle and his interpretation of the past is a potential infinite. This is a sticking point I suppose. Um you can help me out here. I understand the idea that the future is a potential infinite because well it hasn't happened yet. But the past is an actual infinite because it has happened. But neither of them exist on your view. I mean, I broadly speaking am a B theorist about time, which I know you've said in the past and I assume you still think it's the case. If the B theory of time is true, the column cosmological argument doesn't work, right? — I think that it's more difficult to put through on a B theory of time. My — Can we remind audience? I'm not sure what a B theory of time is. Oh, — what Alex has put his finger on is a very profound metaphysical issue about the nature of time — that divides philosophers. The so-called a or as I prefer now the tensed theory of time says that tenses like past, present, and future are objective features of reality and that temporal becoming is real. things really do come into being over time and go out of being. Um the tense or be theory of time says that our experience of tense is illusory. There is no objective difference between past, present and future. Rather this is a subjective feature of human consciousness. And similarly, temporal becoming is unreal. It is an illusion uh of human consciousness. All events in time are stretched out like a spatial line and are onlogically on a par. Now in my original work on the colum cosmological argument, I just assumed the truth of the a theory of time because it seems so obvious to me. This is the common sense view of time. And while I was vaguely aware that there were some philosophers who held to the tenseless theory of time, I discounted them as not really serious. — And then I discovered that in fact this is an enormous debate. And so in my subsequent work I wrote two booklength uh treatments of these issues. — Yes. The tense theory of time, a critical examination, and the tenseless examination. Both published by Cluer Academic Press — and available — in which I argue, — pardon me, — and available at the bookshop outside. — Oh, I doubt it. — These highly academic books are too expensive. Get them at the library, you know, or on inter library loan. But anyhow, um — I I tried then to give a robust philosophically deep um defense of the A theory of time and critique of the B theory of time. But the point I was going to make is that other proponents of the calam cosmological argument

### Segment 10 (45:00 - 50:00) [45:00]

— like the uh Singapore philosopher Andrew Lok — have uh defended the calam argument even given a b theory of time. — Alex the question — of course the relevance of this is the difference between the future and the past on the a theory of time in your view Dr. Craig neither of these things exist. They're not real. — Right. And the idea is that because the past has sort of already happened, we can count it as an actual infinite. — Right. It's part of the actual world. It's actualized. — But not anymore, right? — It's gone. — It It's part of the actual world. Everything that has happened up to the present — is part of actuality. It is complete. It is over. — So, but is the past actual? Yes, it's actual, but it doesn't exist. I'm using the word actual here in the way philosophers talk about actual worlds. — Yeah. — This actual world has been instantiated up to the present moment. — Yeah. — And those events can be counted. We can ask if every h how many prime ministers have there been in a past that goes back forever and ever and no prime minister ever served an infinite We had an infinite number even in this universe. — There would be an actually infinite number. — But of course, but the point is that the future doesn't exist either. And I think I I suppose the problem is giving actuality to a past which doesn't exist and not giving that actuality to a future which doesn't exist but will exist I think doesn't make a lot of sense. And I'll tell you why. For example, you would agree that God knows everything that will happen in the future. Yes. — He knows right now. And you believe that God is in time as well. So God right now, even though the future hasn't happened yet, he knows everything that will happen in the future. The future will happen. We can concept, at least God could sort of conceptually, metaphysically kind of put a box around it in the same. So God knows what's going to happen in the future exactly as much as he knows what has happened in the past. The idea that because the future hasn't happened yet, it therefore has this sort of non-actual status. I want to say that like if neither of them exist, the thing that matters is like to what extent can we say well these are like sets which like conceptually exist which like we can sort of conceptually put a box around and at least for God himself he'd be able to do that just as equally just as easily for the future as the past right it's a not quite sure if I'm finding the right words to say what I mean here but do you see what I'm saying which is that the future does exist conceptually is actual in the sense that God knows exactly what's going to happen. It's already there and it is in fact going to occur infinitely — forever. All of that future is already like conceptually there in the mind of God and yet that's not actual. — Can we have a response on this? I want to — even though neither of them exist — aware of time and I want Alex to give the uh the argument against God's existence as well. So maybe a reply on this in particular. — Okay. Well, I think the key word here is conceptually. Yeah, Alex, even if it is true that the set of events that will happen is actually infinite, the point is that the series of events, the concrete series of events in time — is not and never will be actually infinite. It is always finite and always increasing. Uh and the reason for that is that from any event you number and start going forward or any number n + one is always a finite number. — Mhm. — So if you were to try to instantiate that set of future events in reality one member at a time all you would do would be to generate a series that is potentially infinite. But you would never be able to instantiate all the members of that state. — But the same is true of the past. If you were to instantiate past days one by one and keep going, you could go on potentially infinitely. The point is that if the only thing that exists is the present and we start counting into the future one by one, then yes, that's a potential infinite. I agree with you that the set of past events cannot be instantiated one member at a time. That's the Zeno's argument. And but it is instantiated in reality. — But the point is that if it can't go backwards, why can it go forwards? If the present is all that exists — well I question the answer would be because this is the nature of temporal becoming — it. There are there is there are two directions in time — earlier than and later than. And so even tenseless time theorists will say time is anisotropic.

### Segment 11 (50:00 - 55:00) [50:00]

That is to say it's not the same in all directions. There are two directions in time and they are not the same. — Yes. But time is not only anisotropic, it's asymmetric — in that there is one unique direction of temporal becoming and that is later than. — When an event occurs, the next event that occurs will always be after it, not before it. Temporal becoming in a backward direction is metaphysically absurd. So this is due to the asymmetry of time. And I think this is an asymmetry or symmetry breaker — that people like Alex Malpas and Wes Morrison whom you know are looking for — between the past and future series of events. That allows you to say — the arguments against a beginningless past are sound — but they do not imply that the future cannot be endless. So let me ask the question more specifically then as pertain to God's knowledge as I mentioned a moment ago. — Yes. — You said that God knows — let's say the contents of every hour into the future right now — right — if the future has no end. Now I understand if God is in time and finds out — every hour what happens that's potentially infinite that keeps going on forever. — But God knows right now the contents — of an infinite number — right — of future hours. So God is currently apprehending an actually infinite number of physical temporal things. — Yes. — Which means that God is in apprehension of an actually infinite number of physically instantiated things even if they haven't been instantiated yet. — This is a great question. — Um — it's a great objection. What the uh critic of the art do here — is to somehow import into God an actually infinite number of things — so as to contradict the argument. And so the idea is well maybe God has an actually infinite number of thoughts — or ideas or something of that sort. And here I think that classical theism is quite correct in saying that even though the range of the things that God knows is limitless — uh and infinite that doesn't describe the mode of his knowledge. God's knowledge I think is nonpropositional in character. He grasps the whole of reality as a seamless hole. He doesn't grasp it as fragmented into individual propositional bits. Rather, it is us, we finite knowowers, who fragment God's undivided knowledge into these propositional bits so that we can understand them. But when we say things like God knows that tomorrow I will have pizza for lunch, that doesn't mean that God has this individual sort of thought in his mind. And so this is a kind of modified doctrine of divine simplicity — that though I'm critical of it in many other respects, I think it does provide a very attractive model of the mode of divine cognition. So, sorry, Jack. I I'm interested in then the specificity of God's knowledge. — The specificity. — Yes. And like what your theory of truth is because I don't know is. Mine is not the correspondence theory of truth, but it's the most popular theory of truth that — or some kind of belief to be true. It must correspond with a fact in reality. I can understand the idea that God kind of — intuitits all truth all at once or something like that. That's fine. But — the truths that he knows that he apprehends have to correspond to reference. They have to be things which they refer to. If it's knowledge of the physical world, — correspondence view of truth, — which means — so reality is as God knows it to be. — So even if the mode of God's knowledge is instantaneous, the content of that knowledge consists in reference to an actually infinite number of physical things. something you say. — Well, now you're not importing these into God's mind. It sounds to me like you're wanting to have an actually infinite number of propositions that God knows. And here again, I would say that describes the range of God's knowledge, but not the mode of his knowledge. And as an anti-platonist, — I don't think the propositions exist. — Yeah. I think they're just ideas that we have in our minds, — but there isn't any such thing as the proposition Alex Okconor is British that's out there. Uh, — but there is such thing as an hour in

### Segment 12 (55:00 - 60:00) [55:00]

your view, — pardon me. — There is such thing as an hour, a minute, — well, I think an hour is a conventional unit of time. It's not as though hours and Wednesdays — uh and Januaries actually exist. Those are conventional and we might have lived in a uh a different like the ancient Babylonians had a sex decimal system of time reckoning. — Yeah. So but earlier when I pointed this out and said that an hour is sort of arbitrarily defined by the sun. You say well we can just take that arbitrary measurement and use it as our sort of unit of events and say that if that went on into the past infinitely there'd have to be an infinite number of them. And of course if they go infinitely into the future there would have to be an infinite number of them. But that's okay because they continue to obtain it's a potential but God knows the consequence right now. — Let's go back to what I said with respect to these past intervals. Even though the interval we select is conventional. Yes. — The number of those intervals that have occurred up to now has to be actually infinite. It cannot be finite. But the number of those hours that occur later than in any event, if temporal becoming is real, — right, is always finite and always increasing. Infinity is a limit which is endlessly approached but never arrived at. And the sign of this kind of infinite is the lazy eight or lemnus gate. — Yes. uh that's used in calculus and in that case as I said even if we concede that the set — of all events that will happen has an actually infinite number of members the point is that if you try to instantiate that one member at a time in reality yes — all you get is a concrete — potentially infinite series — events I'm really enjoying this and I want you to be able to respond I just want to remind you just for your own arguments. We're probably 15 20 minutes from audience questions. So, we haven't got an actual infinite amount of time. So, if you — Yes. Very, very good. — Thank you. That's all I just wanted to get in with the quip. But, um, if you want to if you wanted to bring in your objection argument, just be aware of those that time, but it's how you want the — I wonder if I might get a replacement for my tea now, which is gone. — I'm sure we can if uh producer Paul can hear us. — Where's Johnny? He can make it. — He might fire one. — Yeah, — he can. — There we are. Thank you. — I think I think you're — a little tea as well for — I think you're quite right that we should um spend a little bit of time on the alternative. I suppose to wrap up here maybe I can just try to say relatively uncontroversially. This will depend on what you think ladies and gentlemen about the comparison between the past and the future. If the present is all that exists and neither the past or the future exists, is there a relevant metaphysical dis difference? Maybe it's the fact that the past has already happened. But from a sort of bird's eye god's eye view, saying that the past has already happened and the future will happen and both can be known with equal apprehension and equal certitude. It seems to me that from that God's eye perspective, both of these are sort of equally plausible. Now, maybe there is some actually infinite number of future events that God knows of. In which case, I would say there could be an actually infinite number of past events that God knows of too. And of course, if you try to instantiate these one by one, you'll never get to the end. But that works in both directions. And as you say, Dr. Craig, that's not how God's knowledge works. He doesn't think through these propositions one by one. He knows them all at once. And you said even if we say that the set of future events contains an infinite number of members, if you tried to instantiate them one by one, you'd never get to the end. That's fine. But the set as it exists right now, that in the mind of God. — No, only on Pltonism. As I've said, I don't believe in the reality of these abstract objects. I think they're like mathematical fictions. — I agree. The only thing that exists is what they refer to. The thing that really exists refer to — uh the set of all past presidents of the United States — that what it what the members of that set don't all coexist. — No, they don't coexist, but they exist. They like exist as something. — What I mean to say is that the concept itself has to refer to a thing in the physical world in the real world at it. Not I shouldn't say the physical world — you know they that even that isn't true Alex because in set theory — most members of sets are not concrete individuals like you and me and mountains and pebbles. — Yeah

### Segment 13 (60:00 - 65:00) [1:00:00]

— most sets have as their members other mathematical objects — like numbers and curves and things of that sort. So that the whole thing is I think a sort of exercise — of course but then you would just say that those numbers being not ablationist don't exist. They're conceptual. — Yeah. — You say that everything that set theory sort of deals with that's purely mathematical is not real. It's purely conceptual. Yes. — But when it comes to a set which contains reference to real physical things in the world, those world have to exist. And if there's a set right now, — no, think of the set of past US presidents. — They don't all exist right now. And yet that's clearly a set and it can be numbered. You can say there have been 47 Yes. US presidents. — To be clear, 46, didn't Harris, who was it that run twice? — Well, I Yeah, some have served two terms, right? Yes. — So, I'm at the 47th term. — I know. I know what you mean. Um, and yes, but the set exists now is what I mean to say. Like say is that the Okay, the set of all US presidents as a concept exists right now in my mind. There it is. There's the set of all US presidents. Now the members of that set might not all physically exist right now but every single reference of the members of that set is something which at some point exists in physical reality. — Yes. And here is a very interesting I think — logical mistake that people like Malpas who argue similarly make. They infer that because each member of the set will be instantiated that all the members of the set — will be instantiated. Yeah. — And I think that Burgund Russell exposed the fallacy of this thinking through his uh version of the Tristram Chandi paradox where Tristam Shandandy tries to write his own autobiography, but he does so slowly that it takes him a whole year to record the events of one day. And he says, "At this rate, I'll never finish my autobiography. " — Yes. — And Russell didn't disagree with that. All he said was that if Tristram Shandandy is immortal then no page of his autobiography will remain unwritten. — Yes. — So each page will be written but the autobiography will never be finished. Yeah. All the pages will never be written. This is incredibly mindbending but I think is relevant to this issue. — Look um — thank you. It's difficult here because I think we could keep going back and forth forever. Um, but that wasn't even on purpose. That was an accident. Um, really uh but I think I would be remiss not to I and the thing is, you know, I had intended to respond to various of the arguments that you proposed at the beginning. We didn't even do the other premise of the Kalam cosmological argument. Well, and the conclusion too. — And so quite so I'm a little bit stuck for choice here. It's either trying to defend the proposition that things can begin to exist without a cause or it's asking you in the space of 10 minutes to tell me why God allows suffering. Um perhaps for balance we should go with the latter. Um, I think the main reason that people have for not believing in God, I mean, of course, the resurrection, goodness, — the main reason people have not believing in God is the existence of evil or suffering. I prefer to say suffering because evil is a sort of morally laden term. And to me, this argument is sort of endless and never makes very much progress in the sense that people suffer and theologians have theodysies for why they suffer. It's because of free will. It's because of — But don't you think that genuine advance was made by Alvin Plantingga and his discussion of the free will defense? — Not really. But that what I mean to say is that no, — you don't think he put the death nail to the logical version of the problem of evil. — I'm not convinced in that like I'm not sure that the logical problem of evil — ever really held up. Um but I kind of I don't — Oh well that's all right. — I kind of don't want to — that's progress. But talk about that because I think that there's a there is a class of individuals who are usually completely ignored in the discussion of suffering and of course non-human animals. — Yes. — Theodysies that are provided for the re for the for suffering the existence of suffering. The fact that there's human free will — the fact that there was a fool. The fact

### Segment 14 (65:00 - 70:00) [1:05:00]

that our souls will somehow be developed. The fact that higher order goods like bravery and courage can be achieved are plausible, but none of them apply to non-human animals. these animals who for hundreds of millions of years — Yeah. I've written quite a bit on the problem of animal suffering. — I know. So, so perhaps we can rehash it because I'd like to know why it is that you think that for these hundreds of millions of years Suffering is the defining quality of the animal experience. To the extent that this is the mechanism God chose to bring about complexity of life on earth, survival of the fittest is the same thing as the death and destruction of the unfit. Disease, predation, starvation for hundreds of millions of years. And for some reason, when we get to humans, something kind of special happens. we're insold, whatever it might be, such that our suffering gets to be redeemed, but not theirs. We're talking I mean, if I were to go into the details of what happens to animals in the wild on a regular basis, I probably couldn't upload this footage to YouTube because it would get flagged for being too extreme, as you well know. So perhaps in the time remaining we could talk about why it is you think that God would not just allow this but build it into the very mechanism by which life comes to um vary in its complexity on earth. The question here is whether or not the existence of animal suffering in the world is more plausible given naturalism or atheism than it is given theism. And I would argue that animal suffering is vastly more improbable given naturalism — or atheism than theism. And therefore, even if our inability to penetrate divine psychology and say what reason would have God, God would have for choosing an evolutionary process. U which I think we can speculate about. Nevertheless, the balance of probability is overwhelmingly in favor of theism. Animal suffering is more plausible probable on theism. Now, why do I say that? Well, the reason is because if naturalism were true, — then it is incomprehensibly more probable that there wouldn't even be life. — Mhm. — Much less sentient life, — right, — that could experience suffering. And of course, we're back here to the old fine-tuning argument, aren't we? that given the finetuning of the universe, this is vastly more probable given theism than given naturalism. And so in a sense, the existence of animal suffering as well as human suffering is actually evidence for theism because if naturalism were true, it's overwhelmingly more probable there wouldn't be any sentient life and hence no suffering. — Yes, I understand this line of argument. Um, pardon me. I understand what you're getting at. — The issue is I feel like it kind of sidesteps the concern. — It sidesteps. — It sidesteps the concern. Yes, it does. There are many people who believe, for example, that there is some kind of naturalistic explanation for fine-tuning even if we don't know what it is. There are people here who disagree with you, Dr. Craig that think that those arguments aren't sound, aren't strong, at least to the point where they remain agnostic about the existence of a god such that the only data that they can really touch and feel that really sort of strikes them as the most sort of important and plausible is the existence of animal suffering. So I suppose I could frame it this way. Suppose it were the case that all else were equal. — That what — That that otherwise apart from this piece of data — Oh. data. — Oh, but why should we make such a hypothesis that all else were equal when it's not? — So that we can isolate this particular point of data and see if it at the very least decreases the probability of God's existence. — Uhhuh. So you're saying what if animal suffering were just as probable on naturalism is on theism? Then what? I'm saying let's grant the existence of animal suffering and say given that fact about the universe like okay let's grant that there is a universe that exists let's grant that there's a universe exists that abides by physical laws now if you want to say that we can't have the conversation about why animals would be allowed to suffer until we've addressed the finetuning argument then we'll probably need a bit more time but also I don't think that functions for people who simply are willing to say well I just don't agree

### Segment 15 (70:00 - 75:00) [1:10:00]

with the finetuning argument I still want to know why it is that God would allow — if that's to be more than just an opinion or psychological — autobiographical comment, they need to give some good arguments against the fine-tuning argument. And my impression um from reading the literature is that today this fine-tuning argument is the argument for the existence of God that is taken most seriously by non-theists. Can you take uh that Alex is just looking at the systemic problem of evil the problem of evil against theism from evolution by natural selection ignoring the others that argument itself count Alex because I did say I think we can speculate about God's reasons — for allowing an evolutionary history to the world. Um, it seems to me that God's overall purpose for creating life on earth um is for the purpose of human salvation and that his goal is to create a world in which the optimal number of people would freely come to know and embrace eternal salvation which is an incommensurable good to which the suffering in this world cannot even be compared and I don't think it is at all improbable not in a w improbable that only in a world sused with natural and moral evil that the optimal number of people would freely come to embrace God and his salvation and so find eternal life and that could well be the reason for creating the world with an evolutionary history that involve as you say a lot of animal suffering. So the suggestion would be that an animal like a zebra which gets its windpipe caught in the jaws of a lion which is how they're often predated upon that no human ever sees that no human's ever aware of that no other animal is even ever aware of is somehow necessary the conditions under which that occurred are somehow necessary to bring people to salvation in Christ. You know this is the interesting thing about uh the natural world. The tiniest perturbations can over time have a kind of ripple effect such that enormous consequences can follow from seemingly trivial incidents like a zebra is having its trachea collapsed. This is called the butterfly effect and it's illustrated in chaos theory — uh and in uh quantum theory as well. Uh so that I think we're in no position at all to say when we see some instance of evil — that God probably doesn't have a good reason for permitting that to occur. I expected to believe that God is somehow bound by this precarious butterfly effect from a particular instantiation of animal suffering — that somehow brings about salvation that without which God could have found no way to bring about the same salvation. It seems — we don't know. I mean, see, this is again where we're into the realm of pure speculation. But I'm saying it's not implausible that only in a world suffused with natural and moral evil that the optimal number of people would find eternal salvation. I mean, — think of the results of that evolutionary history of the earth. The primeval forests that were laid down now form the basis for the fossil fuels that have made modern civilization possible. — Should God have instead created what's called analos world with the mere appearance of age rather than having an actual evolutionary history? That would be intolerable. We'd have to regard most of our empirical beliefs about the past. two minutes to — those as if those are the only two options. I mean the idea that you know because we rely on fossil fuels temporarily at a point in our sort of human technological trajectory. — Yeah. — That relied on animals becoming fossilized. And the only way that God could have provided us the fuel to bring about the industrial re revolution would have been to create fossils which look like they're ancient animals but actually or he could have just used a

### Segment 16 (75:00 - 80:00) [1:15:00]

different fuel. — Pardon me. — fuel, provided us a different Well, see, then you're totally into pure speculation, you know, about worlds operating according to different laws of nature and so forth. We have no idea what that's like. So remember, this is supposed to be an argument — for atheism. It — it's the atheist — who's bears the burden of proof of showing that God cannot have morally sufficient reasons for creating a world with an evolutionary history. And I think that's a burden of proof the atheist cannot bear. I just I find it difficult to believe that God is somehow constrained by these like environmental conditions such that he can't bring about the world he wants which is a flourishing world of humans who freely choose to come to know him without the existence of fossil fuels. It's a matter of whether or not it's plausible that in order to create a world in which the optimal number of people come to freely know him and embrace salvation that world would involve a very considerable degree of natural and moral evil. — And I don't know how the atheist could show that such a thing is improbable — by saying it's impossible but seemingly implausible. I mean it just seems you can understand how it seems on the surface extremely implausible to say that God could not maximize salvation without fossil fuels. — Well, we don't know we don't know what would happen in such a world. I gave one alternative — that God created an unfollowed world that has coal beds and oil fields and so forth that never were the result of decayed vegetation and eons of primeval forest and that would force us to regard the past as largely illusory. Now then you could say well maybe he could have created different laws of nature and things — right but then we don't know how many people in those worlds very vulnerable to embrace — different laws of salvation I mean what about an what about a world in which animals exist and function in the same way but they're not sentient — but what — sentient yeah — well the question could you have — a dog or a horse or a sheep that functions and isn't sentient. It wouldn't have any pain awareness. It would be no consciousness. — Of course, you could. — You think so? — Absolutely. Yeah. But like why why not? You could have if the reason why these animals exist are for things like laying down the ecosystem. There's absolutely no reason to suggest that there couldn't be an animal which mechanically functions in exactly the same way as an animal that has sentience, but is not in fact sentient. It still moves away from certain inputs in the way that you know metal can react to environment by rusting. An animal can react to an environment in particular in extremely complex ways just sands consciousness. I mean I struggle to believe that God can be sat around with his angels saying I want to create an animal that doesn't feel pain and the angel saying do you really think that's possible? — It's the atheist who needs to show that a morally perfect God should have chosen a world like that if it's even possible rather than a world like this. And I it's not clear to me that is obligatory. The atheist seems to know more about divine psychology than I think he really does. Look, — I really wish Johnny was still here so he could interrupt you because I don't want to end this conversation. I really really don't. I can't ignore the sentience of the people who were here who have brought their questions along this evening. We're opening up to questions from the floor, but we'll start from the left. Big raised hand. Thank you both. Alex, um I've seen seagulls float on air and they clearly seem to be delighting at it. Dogs, animals. I think you put too much emphasis on suffering where I think the animals can delight in their life and play. Um and Bill, I remember last event you mentioned that the purpose of life is of salvation and that it was to behold God and to glorify in him. Don't you think God could be more like an artist and all of creation is this beautiful thing that he's creating? — Alex? — Um, yeah. I mean, animals can surely take the delight in things too, but I think if you look at the totality of the natural world, particularly historically, and add up the pleasure and the suffering involved in animals existence. I think there's good reason to think that the suffering outweighs it. I mean the number of vertebrates who are even alone alive on the planet today is so large that we can only possibly estimate it. If you think about what the average day must be like for one of these animals constant threat of predation — they might enjoy their life. — It it might well be but what I would recommend is there's a chap called um I think his name is Brian Tomasik and he has a website called

### Segment 17 (80:00 - 85:00) [1:20:00]

something like wild animalsuffering. org or something and he recounts he talks about this stuff. He talks about what life is actually like for a wild animal. What kind of experiences they can expect to go through. What kind of suffering And I think that you're mistaken. But even if you weren't even if there was lots of pleasure in the life of an animal and then a bunch of intolerable suffering as well, you would still be left to explain why that suffering exists. It's not as simple as just compensating an animal by saying you're going to have a good life and you're going to suffer seemingly completely unnecessarily. in ways that you will certainly never understand. Is it an animal? Definitely not. And yet this seemingly could have been avoided, but I'm also going to give you some pleasure. And so I guess it's kind of fine. It in other words, it doesn't actually do away with the problem of evil even if the pleasure kind of balances it out or even exceeds it. You would still be left with the unexpectedness of suffering, at least that kind of suffering. And I think that if you look into the to the experiences that these wild animals go through, it's not as as you know high-flying as you say it is. — Um can I ask for another question? Senator, — I'd like to respond — a brief one if we can. I think the questioner makes a really good point and that is uh that animals live basically very happy lives that typically end suddenly because of animal predation. So, I was talking to one evolutionary biologist, Jeffrey Schllo, who thinks that animals are basically very content and happy with the lives uh that they live and that this isn't really the normous problem that atheists would like to claim. This results from anthropopathism where we project human feelings onto animals like Bambi and Thumper and so forth. Uh, and that's actually wrong. As Michael Murray shows in his book, Nature Red and Truth and Claw, Tooth and Claw, even sentient animals like sheep and goats and dogs and cats, while they have pain awareness, they do not have that second order awareness — of knowing that they are themselves in pain, — which human beings as self-conscious subjects do. And that makes human pain and suffering qualitatively distinct from animal suffering. — I'm sorry I'm putting I have to put my foot. — Can you can I get have two kind of quick brief reply because there's and we're taking the question from the lady in the cool jeans for — this idea that animals suffer but they're not aware that they're suffering is to me a self-contradictory statement. To suffer is to be aware that you are suffering. You cannot be in pain without knowing you're in pain. That is the same thing as not being in pain. — And if it is not the same thing, — if it turns out, if it turns out that it's fine because these animals, although they suffer, they don't know that they're suffering. So, it doesn't really matter. I don't know if any of you are pet owners. If you would believe that your animal when it's in pain doesn't somehow know that it's in pain, but good news because it doesn't matter too much. — It's a great I'm going to put my foot down. Take a question over here. — Sorry. Then you should be able to do — question from this young lady. — You should be able to do whatever you want. — I miss Johnny so much. — Why not — like to jump in? — Why not break their legs? — You just need — Why not you need — I'm not leg breaking would be sweet relief for me at this point in time. — Your question and if you can direct it to Bill or Alex. — I I'm sorry. Like if somebody asks question if somebody asks a question I will take the time to say what I'm about to say which is this. Why not break the legs of your animals? Why not rip off their tails? Yes, they may suffer but they don't know that they're suffering. — A divine command to steward the earth and to care for the earth. We have divine command. Why not pollute the oceans and destroy the forest? It's not because they suffer. It's because we have a stewardship from God. It will bring about suffering. The reason why we steward the Earth is because if we don't, then creatures who inhabit the Earth will go on to suffer. That's why we don't worry about environmentally polluting Mars because nobody lives there. — Well, I I don't think that's correct. But I do want to get to other questions. — What are the grounds for saying — your question here? Thank you. — Hello. — Hi. — Sorry. Um, I was noticing a lot of your rebuttals to his arguments were that I find it implausible to believe that a god would allow that. And I was just wondering why we should expect to put our human knowledge and our human morals on a being that quite frankly isn't human. — Because we're also told at the same time that this god imported us with moral intuitions. In fact, one of the arguments that Dr. Craig gave in his original six was a

### Segment 18 (85:00 - 90:00) [1:25:00]

moral argument where he says often times that since objective morals exist and objective morals can only exist in so far as they're grounded by God, we therefore know that God must exist. Now, how do we know that objective morals exist? that? Because God has placed within us, he's written the law on our hearts. He's placed within us extremely strong intuitions about the nature of right and wrong, about the idea that there are right and wrong things and some apprehension of what those things are. And yet, in the face of animal suffering, biblical slavery, genocide, I'm told to abandon these intuitions, the very intuitions that I'm supposed to rely upon to prove the existence of the God who ordained that scripture in the first place. So maybe you might be quite right to say that I shouldn't be able to take my moral intuitions and trust them and say that they're real and that they're accurate. But if that's the case, then you've undermined one of the reasons why we believe in the existence of God as the grounding of morality because that relies on the intuition that objective morals exist. And the intuition that animals don't know that they're suffering is one of the strongest intuitions that I think that I hold. I would like to know what the grounds are for thinking that the suffering is different. I'm serious. I'd really like to know what the grounds are because Dr. Craig said that — that animals don't have this kind of self-awareness. How do we know that? — There are this is a whole new field of scientific study called animal consciousness in 2016 I believe a new journal was founded on animal consciousness. And most animals most organisms are not in any way conscious. They have no sentient states. spiders and insects and worms and algae and so forth aren't sentient beings. When you get to vertebrates, — yes, — uh then scientists begin to detect states of mental awareness that would be shown like pain awareness. Um but there doesn't seem to be a self consciousness in the sense that human beings have it. In order to be aware that one is oneself in pain, one has to be self conscious. And that that Alex is just, you know, pretty common property that apart from the great apes, there's no evidence of selfconsciousness in the — answer's question. True. — Yes. What the test of that was? How you know? Well, like they use like the mirror test where a chimpanzeee — has a white streak on his face and they put a mirror in front of him. He sees a chimpanzeee with the white streak and he reaches up to wipe it off. This seems to show a sort of — and the mirror test has been passed by animals who don't have who are supposed to not have the self-awareness that you say. — This is a great field of ongoing study. every single test of self-awareness that we've ever devised has been passed by animals who according to your theory should not pass it. — No, I don't think that's the case. The point is that the mirror test is a very primitive way of testing self-consciousness. So if you're interested in this, in my systematic philosophical theology, I believe it's in volume three on the doctrine of creation, I have a fairly extended discussion of this topic and show that there are even degrees of self-consciousness from primitive intuitions like the mirror test and the champion to full agency of being a self-conscious first person's perspective. No animal has that first person perspective that can say I think that — and then describe the state. — That's not what pain is. — It is it does involve self-consciousness that I am myself in pain. — Knowing that you are in pain is the same thing as being in pain. — No, that's clearly wrong. — How is it Can you describe to me what it would be like to be in pain and not know you're in pain? Imagine that you were really worried about your taxes, but you didn't know taxes. — That just doesn't make any sense. To be worried about something is to worry about it. — If an animal lacks self-consciousness, it would feel that it would have a pain awareness, but it wouldn't be aware that it is itself in pain because it doesn't have a firsterson perspective. — So, so who is the pain happening to? It's happening to the animal. And that pain is either relevant, morally relevant, or it's not. If the idea is that not having — Now look, I'm not saying it's morally irrelevant. That you're making strong distinctions there. What I said was that animal pain is qualitatively different than human suffering. And

### Segment 19 (90:00 - 95:00) [1:30:00]

therefore, we shouldn't assume too readily. — Of course, it's different. But in the same way, I mean, pain is an experienced phenomenon. We cannot get into the heads of other people and other animals to know what their pain is like. But we do know for example that other animals are far more driven by their sensory inputs than any kind of rationality which they simply don't have. So for example, no one has a trouble no one has trouble accepting that a dog's sense of smell is so much more intense and acute than we could ever possibly imagine. An eagle's eyesight Why? because evolutionarily they rely upon those more than other animals do. Animals having no rationality rely upon their immediate sense data and their reaction to the world of pain. We have better reason I think to think that these animals experience more pain not less. And so at the very least I think we need to be equal. I've heard you say in the past Dr. Craig that like this — look you've got to do more than just give your opinion on this Alex. You need to site scientific literature that supports that because the material I've read and cited says something quite different. — So, can you tell me what it is about an animal's brain specifically that's different to a humans, which means that they're not in self-awareness? — In Michael Murray's book that I cited before, he says that some people speculate about the development of the frontal cortex. — Yeah. — In the human brain that helps to give this — first person perspective. But in talking with Michael about this, he says this is very speculative. But it's not just doesn't know but there could be that specul I think we're getting distracted here by — Nove but the thing is it's not just speculative. You I can have a quick reply. — It's not just speculative. I think it's incorrect. I think it's false. — There are human beings who have lost their prefrontal cortex — who still have a sense of self who report that they are in pain and know pain. We literally have there is a there's a famous patient called patient R, sometimes affectionately known as Roger, who lost his prefrontal cortex due to the herpes virus. — Mhm. — They then do they run tests on him. They put his hand in ice cold water and he tells them, "I am in pain. I'm aware that I'm in pain. " So, we know for a fact it cannot be. — Well, that would suggest that Michael Murray's speculation is incorrect. — Is incorrect. And I think it is. — This question, — we don't know what it is that's different about the brain that would mean that they don't — brought a library of books and has been holding that microphone for far too long. — Hello there. Sorry question. Um, as a vegan, this is a very sensitive topic for me. So, I'm very happy that I get to say my word in this. Um, firstly, I would like to say quickly that um, I've read the Bible and there's a lot of animal suffering in it. I think we're all familiar of that, especially with animal sacrifices that go on. Um, so I would like to site Peter Singer who, you know, is a founder of preference utilitarianism who says that animals are capable of having preferences to not be in pain. Um, and to bring it back to what I heard growing up a lot as a Christian, um, uh, nothing is everything is capable with God or something. Um, so if God is capable of doing everything and every possible world is capable with God, why would God create a world where animals can experience pain and suffering? Um, but maybe if you believe they can't reason, why would they why would God create animals only to experience suffering? — Bill, a question straight to you there. And as you're answering, can we have a question from somebody on the balcony if possible? I can't see up there that far, but if you can find someone, then we'll take that question next. Bill, your answer. — So help me to understand. — The question was they cited Peter Singer told us he well he used to be a preference utilitarian, now he's a hedonistic utilitarian again. So the morally relevant feature is pain and suffering. Why would God allow so much pain and suffering? Uh it's in scripture. It's there. Um is that — I think that we've already addressed this question. extensively. It's uh it's not implausible that only in a world suffused with natural and moral evil that the optimal persons would optimal number of persons would freely come to know God and his salvation. So what the atheist has to show is that there's some other world feasible for God in which a more optimal balance of people freely come to embrace God and his salvation than this world and there's no way the atheist — could prove — such a speculation. — Can we find can we make sure the next question just — I think it was a different question. — She asked about the Bible being full of animal suffering. It's not just the existence of animal suffering which God permits. It's the animal suffering that God commands throughout the Bible. In the book of Joshua, he tells the Israelites to hamstring horses when he's just when he's committing a genocide against them. To hamstring the horses, which seems completely unnecessary. Jesus sends demons into a flock of pigs who then go and drown themselves in the ocean. It

### Segment 20 (95:00 - 100:00) [1:35:00]

seems that if there's any kind of like care for animals and stewardship over the earth that we're supposed to have, it seems that God isn't setting a very good example in the Bible. Uh — question from the top up there, if we can find one. Uh there we go. Your question. — Um so I think a lot of this has boiled down to some kind of argument from fine-tuning, whether that be about moral properties and or physical properties or whatever, right? And Craig has rejected the idea that all of these physical or moral constants could just exist out there, right? We have to have some explanation for them and that explanation flows from the nature of God. But one thing I've always been confused about is if say the physical quant qualities that make up our universe are necessarily explained by God's existence, how is this any different from them just existing as a brute fact out there? If they necessarily follow from God's existence, why is that different from the universe like just existing without a personal creator? — Yeah. So if the question the constants laws of nature finetuning, they're necessary to God's nature. Why is that more uh probable to say they're part of God's nature rather than merely just a part of the world? Why posit fine-tuning is part of the thing God can do? — So the question I thought the question was about moral values and duties. You say it's about the fine tuning. — The blend was that so we had the world is organized as such that it allows for beings such as us that can engage with each other more. Let's — say it was about finding. Well, the reason is that within the parameter of universes governed by the observed laws of nature, in order for intelligent interactive life to exist, the fundamental constants and quantities of nature have to be finetuned to an incomprehensible precision. Otherwise, the universe would be lifepermitting and not just lifep prohibiting uh there wouldn't even be chemistry, matter in the absence of this fine-tuning. So, it is next to impossible that all of these lifemitting constants and quantities should fall by accident into the infinite decimal life permitting range. It is vastly more plausible that there is an intelligent creator of the universe who has determined the fundamental quantities and constants of the universe to be life permitting uh so that the so that life will exist. — The question specifically asks what the difference is between saying that these constants flow necessarily out of God's nature or just sort of flow necessarily out of some kind of brute fact. And I think the answer is will. Like if God has a will, he would will that the constants were a certain way. Whereas some brute fact just the universe itself would not have that kind of will. But the question there to ask is why is it that the meta conditions are set up to make it so difficult to bring about a material world? There's a really interesting argument for narcissism in here by the way ladies and gentlemen which is that the creator of all things doesn't want a material world to exist and so sets up the condition such that it is infinitesessably difficult. Yeah, I think misformulation of — definitely happens anyway. So the intention is explained by an intentional agent who brings about the material world but the meta conditions making it really difficult to bring about material world means that the creator of all things doesn't actually want that material world. — Question from the man with the gray beard and the longest conceivable arm. That's you. Yeah, that's him — right the back. He's two. There's a few gray there. See that one there. Two. One with a gray. That's him. — Two. two to your right there. That's the one. Him. He's got a massive arm. You can't miss him. — I don't know so much about the beard, but you know, — you not have a beard. — The evening's quite young. — Oh, the light is there. Sorry. You're filling in the blanks. — When this session started, all those units of time ago, I thought Alex O' Conor was going to give us arguments against the existence of God. And it seems to me that what he has said is a loving God could not allow human suffering. animal suffering. I'm sorry. Animal suffering or human suffering is not evidence for the existence of God one way or another. What you do, you start with a proposition. Is it more likely that God exists or not? And speaking for myself and for the reasons which Dr. Craig advance, I think the balance of the argument God exists. And if we then try and say why did he do this? Why does he do that? I don't know. I'm not God. And neither does Alex Okconor. Alex, — was that a question — joining in the debate at this point? — Well, if I might just make a comment on that. Go — on. — The questioner I think is actually making a very good point.

### Segment 21 (100:00 - 105:00) [1:40:00]

— It's been said that one man's modus tolins is another man's modus ponins. — Right. Uh that is to say the theist can agree that if God exists then gratuitous that is unnecessary purposeless suffering does not exist. If God does not exist uh or rather if God exists I'm sorry if God exists then gratuitous suffering does not exist. But then the theist can say we have very good arguments and evidence that God exists. And therefore it follows that gratuitous suffering does not exist. That's the logical consequence. And so Dan Howard Snyder in his anthology on the problem of evil says is really only a problem for theists who have lousy grounds for theism. But if you've got good grounds for theism, the problem of evil isn't a problem. As the questioner said, we don't know why God permits the suffering in the world, but that's irrelevant to the fact that if we have good grounds for believing God exists, then that gives good grounds for thinking that the suffering in the world really isn't gratuitous, but serves some greater good. — We spent most of our time this evening discussing one premise of the Kalam cosmological argument, which I don't think is sound. Um, I think that there are lots of very good arguments of the existence of God. It's why I'm an agnostic. I think there are good reasons to believe in God. doubt those reasons. I think there are there's good reasons to doubt that we can even fully understand what we mean when we use a word like God. It would depend on what you mean. We've been talking about the calam. I found it unsound. That's all. I gave you one reason to suspect that the God that William Lane Craig is suggesting, which is an allloving God, which by the way, many arguments of the existence of God, conclude that God must be loving. And so in the case of those arguments, the problem of evil does actually provide a good reason not to believe in that god. Of course, we haven't had time to get into that. And when it comes to talking about even this one argument, which I don't even think is the strongest argument, by the way. I just think it's probably the most popular. I feel as though I it it's up to you to decide if you think that I've even had the time to explain my case properly. But of course, we didn't. It was 10 minutes long. We didn't even begin to talk about the concept of animal suffering. And I think that if you want to just sort of dismiss that as well, I know God exists, so God must have some kind of reason, then fine. But that's not the conversation we're having over here. — here, — it's coming back. — Can we get a microphone on for the recording? Can he just take his reply back? Can you get your reply brief and then Alex with a reply? — We'll jump over here for what might be our final question. If this is the point that you've been making is that animal suffering and human suffering is evidence against the existence of a creator god. What I am saying is it's neither evidence for or evidence against a creator god is decided on other criteria completely. — So would you say that the exist the existence of suffering is more or less expected on the hypothesis of theism or atheism or do you think they are genuinely equal? — Accepted by whom? — What do you mean by it is irrelevant? — Expected by you. It's like saying, "I believe in Father Christmas because he's a nice man and he brings my kids presents, but I don't believe in God because he allows suffering in animals. " I mean, that just doesn't make sense. The two arguments are completely different. — Tell me what you think you would expect to find if there were a God who were invigilating. — I look, I am not God and neither are you. You're going about the wrong way. The first thing you've got to say to yourself, what is the evidence for a creator God? And as you've been fairly conceded just now, there are arguments for and against. But the idea that suffering in animals All right. We're going to move to a question over here just because you have three replies. Alex, a brief reply. — That's fine. If your vision of God, God — No, we're not doing this. If your vision of God is some kind of impersonal entity which creates the universe at some first moment in time due to the impossibility of an actual infinite regress and then just doesn't give a squat about suffering. — If that's the God that you believe in, then fine. But that's not the God that most people are worshiping in church. That's not the God who supposedly resurrects Jesus from the dead for the purpose by the way of human salvation. Meaning that actually at least in the case of human beings their mental states do actually matter quite a bit which I mean which means that if there is some unexpected aspect of that mental existence that needs to be explained and is less expected on the hypothesis of theism of course Christian theism than it is on naturalism which is not to say — we're going to take this question over here from the gentleman to say if you can state your questionism is true that would be greatly apprei Appreciate it. Thank you. — You don't get to respond. — Keep that microphone away from that. — You don't get to shout a bloody night. — Jesus. — You don't get to respond by shouting out and then when I respond to you, point over there for the next question. That's not how this works. — If you want to keep shout shouting responses, that's fine. If you

### Segment 22 (105:00 - 110:00) [1:45:00]

want to keep shouting responses, that is absolutely fine. I'm going to do the same thing. — Are we done now? Got another one shouting your question please. Thank you. — Yes sir. to start with phrase. Um, you said your belief is formed partly on personal experience and partly on these arguments you make and I can't understand how it would be fair that a loving God would allow some of us to be here in London in this year hearing these arguments and some people would have been very isolated hundreds of years ago and not get this chance to I know people who whose belief is formed largely on these kind of arguments. So I can't see a world in which a loving fair god allows people hundreds of years ago to not hear this side and they have to rely purely on personal experience. — I need some help with that. — Yeah. So is it fair? So God only now we're hearing about your great philosophical work and the arguments the existence of God. People 200 years ago didn't get that privilege. How can we expect them to believe? Is it fair that they had to do so only on faith? — Well, I made that point myself, didn't I? that the vast majority of Christians down through history have not believed in God on the basis of philosophical arguments or historical evidence for the gospels which wasn't even accessible for most of them but rather they had an interior way of knowing God through the witness of God's own Holy Spirit to their hearts. The Bible says that God hasn't left us to our own devices to figure out whether he exists based on our own cleverness and ingenuity. Rather, he convicts every person and draws every person to himself uh in repentance and faith and to salvation. And those who will respond to this drawing of God's spirit on their hearts with an open mind and an open heart, I think can know that God exists. He can know that truth wholly apart from arguments and evidence. — We're debating that we can't he without the microphone apart and just because we're we are short. — But the point is about the arbitrariness of the suffering. It's not just the existence of fact that suffering exists somewhere. If every single person experienced some net level of suffering, then fine. Maybe there's some sort of universal reason for that. It's the seeming arbitrariness of it. It's the fact that depending on where you're born, depending on what species you're born as, your life will be vastly different. I think that's the point is it it's not about the existence of suffering per se. — Now, I can relieve you of that worry, Alex. Uh because that's not an argument for atheism. That's an argument for universalism. And that's a quite different question. And this is a question about the accessibility of salvation. And here there's a wide range of views from universalism to narrow particularism and inclusivism along the way. And this is an agreement just people will have trained ways of getting home. I can't I do have to jump to the next because it might change someone's entire evening and weekend plans. So please can we have the be you had a final question? You're — free to leave ladies. you. — No one is holding you captive as far as I know. — I don't I don't know how they get out apart from through these doors. So, your final question up there. Let's uh let's see what — Thank you both for this very spirited discussion. I'm aware that I have the coveted last question spot and I I'm arguing from or observing this conversation from an intuition informed by theories of relativity. And so I couldn't help but noticed inconsistencies and distinctions between both of your points of reference in the discussion on the theories of time. And so Alex, you tend to argue from this God's eye perspective or bird's eye perspective and that contrast or does that lead to different metaphysical implications than arguing from the human perspective? And could it just be that the core of this issue is whether relation precedes relata and if it is down to this point of observation that we have to agree on to shape future conversations. — Um yes I think it makes a massive difference. I sort of also agree with this um this idea that relation precedes relata but that that's a little bit sort of complicated. Um on the point about God's eye, bird's eye, holy dove's eye if you like versus mine, um of course this makes a difference because if there were no God and there were only the present and the only thing which existed was the present moment, then we might be able to say that you know in theory at least somebody who had lived forever could have perfect knowledge of the past but they wouldn't future which would give us some epistemological difference between these two and maybe even a metaphysical one if there were in fact, no God's eye perspective. But as long as there is one, as long as that perspective does exist, which of course you have to believe as a theist, then it seems to me that provides a metaphysical reason for thinking that these are at least comparable, at least in the

### Segment 23 (110:00 - 110:00) [1:50:00]

case of the impossibility of it being actually infinite. I think it makes a huge difference. And so if we were only relegated to our own um sort of human's eye view, that would yeah, that would totally change matters. I don't mean epistemologically, I mean metaphysically. If that were the only view that existed, then that would make a huge difference. Yeah. Thank you all for your wonderful questions. I am really sorry that we would mean that there's no non-relative uh point. This is — no non-relative point from which to measure it all. — I was thinking before time, the length of distances and time. There'd be no objective point at which to even measure them from. — I was thinking I'm going to really miss hosting tonight. I thought I had a bit of FOMO. I was think I wish I'd, you know, threw myself in there. But um no, I did really enjoy the discussion. So, thank you both so much for a spirited discussion. Um, please join me in thanking everybody, especially Bill and Alex for being part of the show. Thank you both. — Thanks. Thanks for coming in. Thank you so much. Appreciate it. Thank you.
