Atheism of the Gaps – Part One

Friendly reminder: There are men and moments for which reading almost anything with the word “atheism” is detrimental.

(This essay is clearly imperfect and is not intended to be final.)

Before I say anything, I wish to clarify my position on the potential fruitfulness of such debate (in circumstances it’s Halachically permissible, of course).

Various Torah teachers (e.g., Likutei Moharan 1:62, 1:64) have claimed the following (I don’t recall real proof):

All the intellectual back-and-forth on these matters (both in the mind and actual dialogue) cannot lead to decisive victory by logic. In other words, both sides are bluffing.

The only rational goal of thought on these matters is to broaden and strengthen the “rhetorical advantage” of the truth; to show Judaism is most certainly not logically fallacious, not completely unproven, not clearly immoral, etc. There is no “silver bullet” on either side, no unarguable argument. אכן אתה אל מסתתר.

Why would this be so?

To leave mankind with free will.

I don’t know what it’s called, so I hereby name this view “Atheism of the Gaps” (a spin on the known “God of the Gaps“).

Much of the argumentation with atheists shows they demand a higher standard of evidence than they themselves require elsewhere. The standards of proof they demand are not, in fact, used by anyone even in the hard, exact sciences. This is defended by comparing the self-correcting nature of science, etc. mostly lacking in religion, but that ignores the fact that practical exactitude is not demanded (in Judaism, anyway: “Lo nitna Torah lemalachei hashares”).

But this definitely does not mean triumph, because God is not a “hypothesis“, anyway! So, when the religionist attempts to get others (or in the mind: to encourage himself) to perform certain actions – thoughts are actions, too –  (if only by personal example) there is always the simple answer: “You can’t make me!” and its crafty, academic identical-twin: “More evidence, please!

(I say religionist, not “Jew” because the sole, true definition of religion is “Judaism”; all other “religions” were and still are pseudo-intellectual and pseudo-emotional avoidance of Divine obligation (see the first chapter of Leibowitz here). Indeed, all human history consists of the battle between Judaism and “Anti-Judaism”, see a summary here.)

Indeed, the ultima ratio of human action is human will, or “אין טעם ברצון”, as described elsewhere.

Alternatively, this can be abridged as “presuppositionalism”.

In short, the metaphysical naturalist cannot defeat hard solipsism, and cannot induct logical induction itself. Some add he cannot defeat ethical nihilism and relativism (myself, I’m not sure). Ergo, anything he says and/or thinks (including “Good morning”) is either viciously circular or violates the law of non-contradiction.

G. K. Chesterton: “Reason is itself a matter of faith. It is an act of faith to assert that our thoughts have any relation to reality at all.”

By the way, those few using deductive apriorism elsewhere (e.g., “Man acts” in economics), must admit it might be useful here, too. Kindly cease with the “Show me!”

Part Two appears here

By the way, we referenced the above article in our free, special ebook on answering atheists. To receive the full Hebrew ebook, subscribe to Hyehudi’s Daily Newsletter here.

כפרות – מנהג שטות?

גם הכותרות בשו”ע נכתבו ע”י המחבר, כידוע. כותרת סימן תר”ה “מנהג כפרות בערב יום כפור”. שמעתי שבדפוסים ראשונים היה כתוב: “מנהג כפרות בערב יום כפור מנהג של שטות הוא“.
לא ראיתי בעצמי.

Are the Best Things in Life Free?

First of all, who cares? We make money because we have goals beyond our individual lives.
And the adage is false to boot if you count the opportunity cost of time and effort. Achieving love, friendship, and health does demand some money (friends are acquired with gifts, Rabbi Bartenura “וקנה לך חבר”, wives must be supported, אסיא דמגן במגן…) and also much time and thought.
In that sense, the best things in life are emphatically NOT free.