(This series of posts reviews in detail Francis Collins’s book The Language of God: A Scientist Presents Evidence for Belief, originally published in 2006. The page numbers cited are from the large print edition published in 2007.)
Collins also takes the familiar tack of using negative arguments for god as a wedge to get his foot in the logical door and, after doing so, to make sweeping claims. This chain of ‘reasoning’ will be familiar to anyone who has ever discussed the existence of god with a believer and it goes like this:
- Start by identifying some features of the universe for which we do not currently have a good scientific explanation.
- Assert that we cannot prove that god was not the cause of those specific events.
- Assert that therefore it is possible that god could have been the cause.
- Assert that therefore it is possible to believe that god can exist.
- Assert that since god can exist and I feel that god exists, therefore god does exist.
- Assert that since god exists, he can do anything at all, so any and all miracles are possible.
- Grant miracle status only to those that I personally or my particular religious sect approve of.
- Hence only my particular religious belief in god is correct and everyone else’s is wrong.