Klaas J. Kraay’s research while affiliated with Ryerson University and other places

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Publications (46)


On preferring God's non-existence
  • Preprint

November 2024

Klaas J. Kraay

·

Chris Dragos

p>For many centuries, philosophers have debated this question: ‘Does God exist?’ Surprisingly, they have paid rather less attention to this distinct – but also very important – question: ‘Would God's existence be a good thing?’ The latter is an axiological question about the difference in value that God's existence would make (or does make) in the actual world. Perhaps the most natural position to take, whether or not one believes in God, is to hold that it would be a very good thing if such a being were to exist. After all, God is traditionally thought to be perfectly powerful and good, and it might seem obvious that such a being's existence would make things better than they would otherwise be. But this judgment has been contested: some philosophers have held that God's existence would make things worse , and that, on this basis, one can reasonably prefer God's non-existence. We first distinguish a wide array of axiological positions concerning the value of God's existence which might be held by theists, atheists, and agnostics alike. We next construe these positions as comparative judgments about the axiological status of various possible worlds. We then criticize an important recent attempt to show that God's existence would make things worse, in various ways, than they would otherwise be.</p


The Problem of No Best World

November 2024

p>[para. 1]: "Traditional versions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam all maintain that God is a perfect being (see Article 25, **PERFECT BEING THEOLOGY**). Famously, Anselm understood this doctrine to mean that God is a being than which none greater is conceivable. If conceivability does not exhaust possibility, the doctrine of divine perfection can be expressed in stronger terms: God is a being than which none greater is possible. This is often thought to entail that God is a necessary being (see Article 33, **NECESSITY**) who is essentially unsurpassable with respect to various attributes, such as power, knowledge, and goodness (see Articles 27, **OMNIPOTENCE**; 28, **OMNISCIENCE**; and 30, **GOODNESS**)."</p


Theism, Pro-Theism, Hasker, and Gratuitous Evil

November 2024

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3 Reads

p>Consider this claim: (1) If God exists, no gratuitous evil occurs. This claim enjoys widespread assent in contemporary analytic philosophy of religion. It could be harnessed into an argument for pro-theism : it certainly looks like a reason for thinking that God’s existence would make the world better than it would otherwise be, at least if there is an appropriate causal connection between the antecedent and the consequent. But (1) is also the first premise of a widely discussed argument for atheism that continues as follows: (2) Gratuitous evil occurs. Therefore, (3) God does not exist. In recent decades, much of the debate about this argument (and probabilistic variants of it) has concerned the claim expressed in premise (2). Critics of this claim have defended accounts of our epistemic circumstances and capacities according to which this premise cannot reasonably be asserted. This controversial position has become known as skeptical theism , and it has generated a large and very technical literature. A few authors, however, have attempted to resist (1). One such strategy is developed in a series of important publications by William Hasker (1992, 2004b, 2008). If Hasker’s argument were to succeed, this would be an important result for the overall debate about whether God exists, since it would count against a prominent kind of argument for atheism. While Hasker does not explicitly consider the question of the axiological consequences of God’s existence, his argument, if sound, would also be an important result for this debate, since it would count against one line of apparent support for pro-theism . In section 2, I discuss certain restrictions on God’s permission of evil in order to illuminate claim (1), and in section 3, I set out Hasker’s case against it. In section 4, I clarify an important point about Hasker’s argument: I show that it does not require Hasker to maintain that God’s plan for creation requires the actual occurrence of gratuitous evil. In section 5, I set out and evaluate four criticisms of Hasker’s argument. Finally, in an Appendix, I consider the merits of a successor argument for atheism – one that is compatible with Hasker’s view.</p


Peter van Inwagen on gratuitous evil

November 2024

p>Defenders and critics of the evidential argument from evil typically agree that if theism is true, no gratuitous evil occurs. But Peter van Inwagen has challenged this orthodoxy by urging that for all we know, given God's goals, it is impossible for God to prevent all gratuitous evil, in which case God is not required do so. If van Inwagen is right, the evidential argument from evil fails. After setting out this striking and innovative move, I examine three responses found in the literature, and show that none of them defeats van Inwagen's argument. I then offer a novel criticism: I show that van Inwagen implicitly relies on the claim that God can sensibly be thought to satisfice , and I argue that this is seriously under-motivated. Accordingly, van Inwagen's objection to the evidential argument from evil is, at best, incomplete.</p


Is motivated submaximization good enough for God?

November 2024

p>In a recent article (Kraay 2013), I argued that some prominent responses to two important arguments for atheism invoke divine satisficing – and that the coherence and propriety of this notion have not been established. Chris Tucker (2016) agrees with my evaluation of divine satisficing, but disagrees with my exegesis of these responses. He argues that they should be understood as invoking motivated submaximization instead. After reviewing the dialectical situation to date, I assess whether motivated submaximization can be deployed in such a way as to defeat these arguments for atheism. I argue that it's far from clear that it can.</p


Can God Satisfice?

November 2024

p>Three very prominent arguments for atheism are (1) the argument from sub-optimality, (2) the problem of no best world, and (3) the evidential argument from gratuitous evil. To date, it has not sufficiently been appreciated that several important criticisms of these arguments have all relied on a shared strategy. Although the details vary, the core of this strategy is to concede that God either cannot or need not achieve the best outcome in the relevant choice situation, but to insist that God must and can achieve an outcome that is good enough. In short, this strategy invokes divine satisficing in response to these arguments for atheism. (The widespread use of this strategy may have gone unnoticed because the appeal to divine satisficing is usually implicit.) In sections 1-3, the three arguments for atheism will be set out, and it will be shown that the relevant replies all employ this shared strategy. Section 4 will show that those who invoke divine satisficing have failed to establish that this is a coherent notion. Accordingly, these replies to three important arguments for atheism are, at present, incomplete. </p


Theistic Replies to the A Priori Argument for Atheism

November 2024

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1 Read

In the central chapter of Can God Be Free?, William Rowe offers what amounts to an a priori argument for atheism. In what follows, I first clarify this argument, and I then defend it against recent criticisms due to William Hasker. Next, however, I outline four ways in which theists might plausibly reply to Rowe's argument.


On preferring God's non-existence

November 2024

·

2 Reads

p>For many centuries, philosophers have debated this question: ‘Does God exist?’ Surprisingly, they have paid rather less attention to this distinct – but also very important – question: ‘Would God's existence be a good thing?’ The latter is an axiological question about the difference in value that God's existence would make (or does make) in the actual world. Perhaps the most natural position to take, whether or not one believes in God, is to hold that it would be a very good thing if such a being were to exist. After all, God is traditionally thought to be perfectly powerful and good, and it might seem obvious that such a being's existence would make things better than they would otherwise be. But this judgment has been contested: some philosophers have held that God's existence would make things worse , and that, on this basis, one can reasonably prefer God's non-existence. We first distinguish a wide array of axiological positions concerning the value of God's existence which might be held by theists, atheists, and agnostics alike. We next construe these positions as comparative judgments about the axiological status of various possible worlds. We then criticize an important recent attempt to show that God's existence would make things worse, in various ways, than they would otherwise be.</p


Can God Choose a World At Random?

November 2024

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1 Read

p>On what basis does God choose a possible world to make actual? Theists typically claim that God freely selects exactly one world on the basis of its axiological characteristics. But suppose that there are infinitely many unsurpassable worlds from which to choose; or else that there are no unsurpassable worlds, but instead an infinite hierarchy of increasingly better worlds. On each of these scenarios, philosophers have alleged that God is unable rationally to choose a world for actualization. In the former case, God lacks sufficient reason to select any particular world, since there are infinitely many other equally good candidates. In the latter case, God lacks sufficient reason to select any particular world, since for any world there are infinitely many better candidates. These considerations generate arguments for atheism, as follows. On theism, God is supposed to be the explanation for this world ’s being actual, and God requires sufficient reasons for action. So on either scenario or, since there is an actual world, and since God could not have had a sufficient reason for selecting it, this world was not actualized by God. In response, defenders of theism have urged that God need not have sufficient reason for choosing a world on or : God may defensibly choose a world at random. In what follows, I evaluate this reply. I conclude that it succeeds only on the enormously implausible assumption that there is exactly one randomizer available to God Like Recommend Bookmark Cite Options</p


Elgin's Community-Oriented Steadfastness

November 2024

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2 Reads

p>In recent years, epistemologists have devoted enormous attention to this question: what should happen when two epistemic peers disagree about the truth-value of some proposition? Some have argued that that in all such cases, both parties are rationally required to revise their position in some way. Others have maintained that, in at least some cases, neither party is rationally required to revise her position. In this paper, I examine a provocative and under-appreciated argument for the latter view due to Catherine Z. Elgin (2010, 2012, 2017, and 2018). I defend it against a series of objections, and I then identify some fruitful ways in which her view could be developed further.</p


Citations (16)


... The purpose of this article is to introduce the reader to the main themes in the current debate between anti-theists and pro-theists. After that I will examine a novel form of pro-theism, recently offered by Klaas J. Kraay (2021). ...

Reference:

The axiology of theism: Problems and prospects
The Axiology of Theism
  • Citing Book
  • September 2021

... In the last part of the paper, he defends and explores Elgin's claim that disagreements can be epistemically beneficial for inquiry and complements Elgin's view by showing what role such a claim could play in an argument defending non-conciliatory (i.e., steadfast) views of peer disagreement. Kraay (2019) reminds us that Elgin herself seems to favor a certain form of steadfastness. She writes: ...

Elgin’s community-oriented steadfastness
  • Citing Article
  • Publisher preview available
  • June 2021

Synthese

... Considering only absolute power, God could create a world where the balance of goods and evils would be tilted in favor of evils, but if we think of God's ordered power, that hypothesis becomes meaningless. Kraay (2018) is right, in this sense, when he responds to Almeida (2017) by pointing out that God does not necessarily actualize all possibles indiscriminately, but that other factors need to be consid-1 1 (2 ) / 2 0 2 3 ered in his operation. God is a rational agent, so it can be expected that his action responds to reasons and is also consistent with his goodness. ...

One Philosopher’s Bug Can Be Another’s Feature: Reply to Almeida’s “Multiverse and Divine Creation”

Religions

... 2 The terms 'pro-theism' and 'anti-theism' are due to Guy Kahane (2011), although my definition here is slightly weaker than his, due to some pressure from Moser (2013). Kahane's paper sparked the current literature on this topic, which now includes Mawson (2012), Luck and Ellerby (2012), Kraay and Dragos (2013), Kraay (2013), Moser (2013), Davis (2014), Davis and Franks (2015), Penner (2015), Penner and Lougheed (2015), McLean (2015), Dumsday (2016), Mugg (2016), Lougheed (2017), the papers collected in Kraay (2018), Azadegan (forthcoming), Linford and Megill (forthcoming), Lougheed (forthcoming-a), Lougheed (forthcoming-b), and Penner (forthcoming). 3 These positions are best construed as sharing a commitment to axiological realism -the view that there are objective facts about such axiological matters. 4 Among contemporary analytic philosophers of religion, theism is typically thought to be either necessarily true or necessarily false. ...

On preferring God's non-existence
  • Citing Article
  • April 2013

Canadian Journal of Philosophy

... There are, for instance, no on balance bad [universes] in that multiverse ... And there are no [universes] in which the level of goodness falls just below the standard of goodness for universes in the theistic multiverse (8). 10 7 In my view, O'Connor's God turns out to be a satisficer-and for my criticisms of divine satisficing, see Kraay (2013). 8 O'Connor (2008) seems persuaded by the thought that God inevitably creates (p. ...

Can god satisfice?
  • Citing Article
  • October 2013

American Philosophical Quarterly

... 23 It's worth noting that this objection could be expressed in counterpart-theoretic terms. My tentative reply is developed in Kraay (2011a): there is reason to think that on theism, TM is the only possible world, in which case a fortiori no individual can inhabit multiple worlds, and no individual has an other-worldly counterpart. 24 Monton's view is puzzling: since many proponents of theistic multiverses already concede that there may be infinitely many universes worthy of being created and sustained, it's not clear what his appeal to duplicates adds to the discussion. ...

Theism and modal collapse
  • Citing Article
  • October 2011

American Philosophical Quarterly

... 2 The terms 'pro-theism' and 'anti-theism' are due to Guy Kahane (2011), although my definition here is slightly weaker than his, due to some pressure from Moser (2013). Kahane's paper sparked the current literature on this topic, which now includes Mawson (2012), Luck and Ellerby (2012), Kraay and Dragos (2013), Kraay (2013), Moser (2013), Davis (2014), Davis and Franks (2015), Penner (2015), Penner and Lougheed (2015), McLean (2015), Dumsday (2016), Mugg (2016), Lougheed (2017), the papers collected in Kraay (2018), Azadegan (forthcoming), Linford and Megill (forthcoming), Lougheed (forthcoming-a), Lougheed (forthcoming-b), and Penner (forthcoming). 3 These positions are best construed as sharing a commitment to axiological realism -the view that there are objective facts about such axiological matters. 4 Among contemporary analytic philosophers of religion, theism is typically thought to be either necessarily true or necessarily false. ...

Method and Madness in Contemporary Analytic Philosophy of Religion
  • Citing Article
  • September 2013

Toronto Journal of Theology

... Therefore there must at some point be either one universe that surpasses all others (in which case we're in the previous situation) or we have at least two universes that are either incomparable or equivalent in axiological status; these then, are both unsurpassable. Kraay himself argues that incommensurate possible worlds must exist [7], and uses this fact to undermine the rational choice model of divine creation [17, p. 13] 2 . But are these worlds (i.e., multiverses) or universes? ...

Incommensurability, incomparability, and God's choice of a world
  • Citing Article
  • January 2011

International Journal for Philosophy of Religion