KEITH WARD'S BOOK
Kirk Straughen
(Investigator 131, 2010
March)
I refer to the report on Keith Ward's book Why There Almost
Certainly is a God (#130, page 31).
I have found some book reviews that may be useful to readers who wish
to find out more. This no substitute for reading the book itself but
the following concluding remarks of the reviewer may prove useful:
Throughout the book Ward tries very hard to pretend that he is just
building a purely logical case for God based on what we know of the
world and on some reasonable extrapolations and assumptions. But the
more you read the more you realize he is just rationalizing ideas he
wants dearly to believe. There is no sound basis for going from,
"Something must exist eternally and necessarily," to "That something
must be an omnipotent being." Having made that leap, there is
absolutely no basis for thinking that being is omnibenevolent. Having
made both leaps, he then dutifully tries to explain why the sheer
relentless awfulness of human and animal existence does not pose a
challenge for his theory. He wants to create room for religious
revelations, so he invents a lot of argle-bargle about what God would
or would not do, and simply ignores the enormous harm that has been
done by God's unwillingness to communicate clearly what He wants from
us.
http://scienceblogs.com/evolutionblog/2009/08/my_review_of_why_there_almost.php
Ward uses one of science's finest achievements — the discovery of the
bizarre quantum world — as a weapon with
which to
undermine the materialist world-view championed by Dawkins. The
appealing simplicity of the latter evaporates when you look at the
building blocks of the universe closely enough: "What is the point of
being a materialist when we are not sure exactly what matter is?" The
fact that modern physics' best theories about the universe are
verifiable experimentally counts in their favour, but Ward only needs
you to concede that his "God hypothesis" is simpler to have exposed a
chink in Dawkins' armour.
Exploiting it, Ward's line of reasoning becomes increasingly abstract,
but never less intellectually intriguing. Dawkins' blazing polemic is
by far the more fun to read (and to my mind the more convincing) but
Ward's courteous objections are stimulating and elegant nonetheless.
http://richarddawkins.net/articles/3175