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APOLOGETICS, LOGIC, AND REASONING Presented by Ratio Christi TAMU Logically Captain…

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Logically Captain…. Presented by Ratio Christi TAMU. Apologetics, Logic , And reasoning. Greek ( άπολογία ). Apologetics. God commands the use of Reason. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

APOLOGETICS, LOGIC, AND REASONING

Presented by Ratio Christi TAMU

Logically Captain…

Page 2: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

Greek (άπολογία)

APOLOGETICS

Page 3: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

WHY APOLOGETICS? God commands the use of Reason.

“but sanctify Christ as Lord in your hearts, always being ready to make a defense to everyone who asks you to give an account for the hope that is in you, yet with gentleness and reverence.“ (1 Peter 3:15)

Philippians 1:7 Paul speaks of his mission as one of "defending and confirming the gospel.“(Phil 1:16)

Page 4: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

IS APOLOGETICS ARGUING? But avoid foolish controversies,

genealogies, quarrels, and fights about the law, because they are useless and empty. (Titus 3:9)

Only if it is foolish!

Page 5: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

OBJECTIONS TO APOLOGETICS There have been many objections to

apologetics from Christians:

Page 6: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

THE BIBLE DOES NOT NEED TO BE DEFENDED?

"The Word of God is alive and powerful..." (Hebrews 4:12)

The Bible is like a lion; it does not need to be defended but simply let loose. A lion can defend itself. Several things should be noted in response.

Page 7: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

THE BIBLE DOES NEED TO BE DEFENDED?

How do we know the Bible is the Word of God?

The Qur'an is alive and powerful and sharper than a two-edged sword....

A roar of a lion speaks with authority only because we know from previous knowledge what a lion can do. Without the tales of woe about a lion's ferocity, its roar would not have the same authoritative effect on us.

Page 8: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

JESUS REFUSED TO DO SIGNS FOR EVIL MEN

Jesus rebuked people who sought signs. Hence, we should be content simply to believe without evidence

"A wicked and adulterous generation asks for a miraculous sign!" (Matt. 12:39 cf. Luke 16:31)

Page 9: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

JESUS REFUSED TO DO SIGNS FOR EVIL MEN

First, even in this very passage Jesus went on to offer the miracle of His resurrection as a sign of who He was, saying:

"But none will be given it except the sign of the prophet Jonah (Matt. 12:39-40)

Page 10: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

PAUL WAS UNSUCCESSFUL IN HIS USE OF REASON ON MARS HILL

Paul was unsuccessful in his attempt to reach the thinkers on Mars Hill (Acts 17)

later telling the Corinthians that he wanted to "know Jesus and Him only" (1 Cor. 2:2)

Page 11: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

PAUL WAS UNSUCCESSFUL IN HIS USE OF REASON ON MARS HILL

Paul did have results on Mars Hill Some were saved, including a philosopher A few men became followers of Paul and

believed. Among them was Dionysius, a member of the Areopagus, also a woman named Damaris, and a number of others" (Acts 17:34).

nowhere in either Acts or 1 Corinthians does Paul indicate any repentance or even regret over what he did on Mars Hill

Page 12: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

ONLY FAITH, NOT REASON, CAN PLEASE GOD

“Without faith it is impossible to please God.” Heb. 11:16

Asking for reasons, rather than simply believing, would displease God.

Page 13: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

ONLY FAITH, NOT REASON, CAN PLEASE GOD

The text does not say that with reason it is impossible to please God.

God in fact calls upon us to use our reason (1 Pet. 3:15) and has given "clear" (Rom. 1:20) and "convincing proofs" (Acts 1:3 NASB) so that we do not have to exercise blind faith.

This text in Hebrews does not exclude "evidence" but actually implies it.

Page 14: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

GOD CAN'T BE KNOWN BY HUMAN REASON

“The world by wisdom knew not God" (1 Cor. 1:21 NKJV)

People cannot know the wisdom of God through reason.

Page 15: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

GOD CAN'T BE KNOWN BY HUMAN REASON

Paul declared in Romans that the evidence for God's existence is so "plain" as to render even the heathen "without excuse" (Rom. 1:19-20). 

The "wisdom" of which he speaks is "the wisdom of this world" (v. 20), not the wisdom of God. Paul called a sophist the "disputer of this age" (v. 20). Sophist could argue for argument's sake. This leads no one to God.

Page 16: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

ONLY THE HOLY SPIRIT CAN BRING SALVATION

Salvation is a work of the Holy Spirit. He alone can convict, convince, and convert (John 16:8; Eph. 2:1; Titus 3:5-7).

Page 17: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

ONLY THE HOLY SPIRIT CAN BRING SALVATION

The Bible does not teach that the Holy Spirit will always do this apart from reason and evidence.

It is not either the Holy Spirit or Reason.

God is always the efficient cause of salvation, but apologetic arguments can be an instrumental cause used by the Holy Spirit to bring one to Christ.

Page 18: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

Greek (λογική)LOGIC

Page 19: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

WHAT IS LOGIC The science of analyzing arguments?

The science of good reasoning in general?

Tagore A mind all logic is like a knife all blade, it

makes the hand bleed that uses it

Page 20: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

WHAT IS A FORMAL ARGUMENT Premises that lead to a conclusion

P1: If God exists he works all events for the good of those who believe;

P2: Some events produce no good; C: Therefore God does not exist.

The conclusion either follows from the premises logically, or is at least probable given the premises.

Page 21: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

APOLOGETICS IS NOT USED IN THE BIBLE?

Mostly, the Bible was not written for unbelievers but for believers. 

Apologetics IS used in the Bible. Genesis 1 deals with mythical accounts of creation  Jesus was constantly proving by signs and wonders

that He was the Son of God (John 3:2; Acts 2:22) Paul did apologetics at Lystra when he gave

evidence from that God existed and idolatry was wrong (Acts 14)

Mars Hill

Page 22: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

ROADMAPTypes of Arguments• Inductive• Deductive

Bad Arguments• Formal Fallacies• Informal Fallacies

Tactics• Analysis

Page 23: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

TYPES OF ARGUMENTS Inductive

Results in a high probability that the conclusion is true.

Common in science

Deductive Arguments If the premises are true,

and the structure is correct, the conclusion must be true.

Page 24: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

INDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS Has premises and conclusion, but is

probabilistic 100% of biological life forms that we know of

depend on liquid water to exist. Therefore, if we discover a new biological life form

it will probably depend on liquid water to exist. Used in the scientific method The conclusion is not certain, only

probable

Page 25: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

STATISTICAL SYLLOGISM Statistical Syllogism

P1: Most Greeks ate fish; P2: Socrates was a Greek; C: Therefore Socrates probably ate fish.

Similar in form to the deductive syllogism The conclusion is still not certain,

only probable

Page 26: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

GENERALIZATION Assumes a sample has

the same attributes as a population

10% of the survey were Democrats

Therefore, 10% of people are Democrats

Page 27: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

ANALOGY Compares two situations

Situations A and B are similar in properties X and Y

Situation A also has property Z Therefore, B probably has property Z as

well

May provide good evidence for a claim Is not conclusive

Page 28: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

PREDICTION Draws a conclusion about the future

from the past Every time in the past that an apple has

been dropped, it has fallen. Therefore, if I drop an apple now, it will

probably fall

One of the foundational assumptions of science

Page 29: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS Has premises and conclusion

P1: All men are mortal; P2: Socrates was a man; C: Therefore Socrates was mortal.

The conclusion is certain, but only if the premises are true and the structure is correct

Page 30: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

VALIDITY AND SOUNDNESS Validity

An argument is valid if it has the correct form

Sound An argument is sound if it is valid

and the premises are true

Page 31: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

TYPES OF DEDUCTIVE REASONING Categorical Logic Propositional Logic Modal Logic

Page 32: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

CATEGORICAL LOGIC First formalized by Aristotle Made up of simple statements Not all arguments can be translated

into this form But many can be translated into this form

Page 33: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

CATEGORICAL LOGIC 4 types of statements

All S are P No S are P Some S are P Some S are not P

Can be combined into groups of three called a syllogism

Page 34: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

CATEGORICAL SYLLOGISM Requires two kinds of premises

Major Premise: All men are mortal; Minor Premise: Socrates was a man; Conclusion: Therefore Socrates was

mortal. The premises must share a term

(middle term) P1: All men are mortal; P2: Socrates was a man; C: Therefore Socrates was mortal.

Page 35: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

CATEGORICAL SYLLOGISMS Not all combinations of terms are valid;

P1: All cats are mammals; P2: Oreo is a Cat; C: Therefore Oreo is a mammal.

P1: All mammals are animals; P2: some cats are animals; C: Therefore some cats are mammals.

X

Page 36: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

PROPOSITIONAL LOGIC The most basic logic dealing with conditionals If then statements, etc.

More powerful than simple categorical syllogisms 9 basic rules

Page 37: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

RULE #1 MODUS PONENS

If P, then Q P Therefore, Q

Valid, example: If the ground is wet, it is raining The ground is wet Therefore it is raining

(this one is unsound because the premise is false)

Page 38: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

RULE #2 MODUS TOLLENS

If P, then Q Not Q Therefore, not P

Valid, example: If it is raining, the ground is wet The ground is not wet Therefore it is not raining

(This one may be unsound as well)

Page 39: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

RULE #3 HYPOTHETICAL SYLLOGISM If P then Q If Q then R Therefore if P then R

Example If it is raining, the ground is wet If the ground is wet, the roads are slippery Therefore, if it is raining, the roads are

slippery√

Page 40: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

RULE #4 CONJUNCTION P Q Therefore P and Q

Example John is a good student Mary is a good student Therefore John is a good student and Mary

is a good student√

Page 41: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

RULE #5 SIMPLIFICATION P and Q Therefore P

Example John is a good student and Mary is a good

student Therefore John is a good student

Page 42: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

RULE #6 ABSORPTION If P then Q Therefore If P then P and Q

Example If it is raining, the road is wet Therefore if it is raining, it is raining and

the road is wet√

Page 43: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

RULE #7 ADDITION P Therefore P or Q

Example It is raining Therefore if it is raining or the sun is

shining√

Page 44: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

RULE #8 DISJUNCTIVE SYLLOGISM P or Q Not P Therefore, Q

Example It is either raining or the sun is shining It is not raining Therefore, the sun is shining√

Page 45: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

RULE #9 CONSTRUCTIVE DILEMMA If P then Q and If R then S P or R Therefore, Q or S

Example If it is raining the streets are wet, and if it

is sunny the streets are dry It is either raining or sunny Therefore, the streets are wet or the

streets are dry

Page 46: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

ROADMAPTypes of Arguments• Inductive• Deductive

Bad Arguments• Formal Fallacies• Informal Fallacies

Tactics• Analysis

Page 47: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

FORMAL FALLACIES Result from errors of logical form

May have true conclusions But the conclusion does not follow from the

premises

Page 48: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

INCORRECT CATEGORICAL SYLLOGISM Many types: Ex:

All communists are leftists.  No conservatives are communists.  Therefore, no conservatives are leftists.

Ex: All dogs are animals.  No cats are dogs.  Therefore, no cats are animals.

X

X

Page 49: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

AFFIRMING THE CONSEQUENT Improper modus ponens Ex:

If God exists, then objective morals and duties exist

Objective morals and duties do exist Therefore God exists

X

Page 50: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

DENYING THE ANTECEDANT Improper modus tollens Ex:

If God does not exist then objective values and duties do not exist

God does exist Therefore objective values and duties exist

X

Page 51: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

INFORMAL FALLACIES Mistakes in reasoning that arise from

the content of the argument⁻ Ad hominem⁻ Red herring ⁻ Straw man⁻ Appeal to Authority⁻ Slippery Slope⁻ Weak Analogy⁻ Hasty Generalization

⁻ False Cause⁻ Appeal to

Ignorance⁻ Bandwagon⁻ Genetic Fallacy⁻ Begging the question

⁻ Appeal to Emotion⁻ Special pleading⁻ Equivocation⁻ Self refuting Statements

Page 52: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

Meaning: “To the man” Favorite of politicians Ex:

"All politicians are liars, and you're just another politician. Therefore, you're a liar and your arguments are not to be trusted."

AD HOMINEM

X

Page 53: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

An irrelevant fact intended to divert attention from the real issue

Therefore, if morality exists, then God must exist too!

Sure, but what about slavery in the Bible? That does not sound very moral to me…

Don’t take the bait!

RED HERRING

X

Page 54: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

Misrepresenting your opponents position so it can be more easily defeated

“Here is the message that an imaginary 'intelligent design theorist‘ might broadcast to scientists: 'If you don't understand how something works, never mind: just give up and say God did it.” –Richard Dawkins

“one of the truly bad effects of religion is that it teaches us that it is a virtue to be satisfied with not understanding.” -Richard Dawkins

STRAW MAN

X

X

Page 55: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

APPEAL TO ILLEGITIMATE AUTHORITY If an argument is based on authority, it

should be a legitimate authority, otherwise it is a bad argument

Ex: Biogeography gives very strong evidence for evolution. But Ray Comfort says evolution is false!

X

Page 56: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

SLIPPERY SLOPE Argues that by permitting A to occur, a

far-fetched Z will occur. Only fallacious if Z is not a likely

consequence of A Ex:

Colin Closet asserts that if we allow same-sex couples to marry, then the next thing we know we'll be allowing people to marry their parents, their cars and even monkeys. –yourlogicalfallacy.com

X

Page 57: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

WEAK ANALOGY If using an inductive analogy, the

analogy must be strong or the argument is fallacious

Ex: Cars and motor-boats both have engines and steering wheels. Cars have wheels Therefore boats must have wheels as well

X

Page 58: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

HASTY GENERALIZATION Drawing a conclusion about a whole

group based on a few members of that group Not all generalizations are hasty

Ex: Both of the politicians I have met were liars Therefore, all politicians are liars

X

Page 59: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

FALSE CAUSE Post hoc ergo proctor hoc (After

this therefore because of this) Correlation does not imply causation

Ex: Pointing to a fancy chart, Roger shows

how temperatures have been rising over the past few centuries, whilst at the same time the numbers of pirates have been decreasing; thus pirates cool the world and global warming is a hoax.

–yourlogicalfallacy.com

X

Page 60: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

APPEAL TO IGNORANCE Draws a conclusion from a lack of

evidence Absence of evidence is not necessarily

evidence of absence

Ex: You arguments have failed to show that God

exists; Therefore, God must not exist.

X

Page 61: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

BANDWAGON Everyone knows that…

Ex: Everyone knows that Stephen Hawking disproved

God…X

Page 62: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

GENETIC FALLACY Claiming a belief is false because you can

explain why someone believes it “Why aren’t you a Hindu? Because you happen

to have been brought up in America, not in India. If you had been brought up in India, you’d be a Hindu. If you’d been brought up in Denmark at the time of the vikings, you’d be believing in Wotan and Thor. If you had been brought up in classical Greece you’d be believing in Zeus. if you had been brought up in central Africa, you’d be believing in the great Juju up the mountain.” –Richard Dawkins

X

Page 63: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

BEGGING THE QUESTION How do I know the Bible is true?

Because the Bible says it is true, and I believe it!X

Page 64: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

ARGUMENT FROM EMOTION An appeal to

emotion “they were

religious, and that provided all the justification they needed to murder and destroy” –Richard Dawkins

“Imagine, with John Lennon, a world with no religion. Imagine no suicide bombers, no 9/11, no 7/7, no Crusades, no witch-hunts…” –Richard Dawkins

X

Page 65: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

SPECIAL PLEADING Exempting your claims from your own

requirements Everything that exists has a cause God exists So what caused God? A: God doesn’t count because He’s uncaused!

X

Page 66: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

EQUIVOCATION Using the same word with two different

meanings Define your terms!

Page 67: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

SELF REFUTING STATEMENTS The argument

proves itself to be wrong

Page 68: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

ROADMAPTypes of Arguments• Inductive• Deductive

Bad Arguments• Formal Fallacies• Informal Fallacies

Tactics• Analysis

Page 69: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

ANALYZING ARGUMENTS Arguments are rarely stated in simple

syllogisms We must take complex arguments and

break them down into simple parts we can analyze

Page 70: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

EXAMPLE 1 What would happen if we get down on our

knees and pray to God in this way: Dear God, almighty, all-powerful, all-loving

creator of the universe, we pray to you to cure every case of cancer on this planet tonight. We pray in faith, knowing you will bless us as you describe in the Bible. In Jesus' name we pray, Amen.

We pray sincerely, will anything happen? No. Of course not

http://godisimaginary.com/i1.htm

Page 71: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

ANALYSIS What was the argument Maybe…

God promises to answer all prayers God didn’t give me what I prayed for Therefore God does not exist

Page 72: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

ANALYSIS False premise

God promises to answer all prayers

Christians do not necessarily believe this, so the argument is unsound

Page 73: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

ANALYSIS What was the argument?

If I pray and God exists, then God will answer my prayer

I prayed God didn’t answer my prayer Therefore God does not exist

This is valid, but Christians may disagree with the premises

Page 74: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

EXAMPLE 2“We could learn to live with people from all races and not immediately hating and wanting to kill someone just because they believe in a different god.Yes, a world without God would be a far better, friendlier and happier place. A world without religion would also be a safer place for innocent children, who have been abused by the religious-lot for centuries and continue to be abused.” –god-does-not-exist.org

Page 75: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

ANALYSIS This argument was an argument from

emotion It did not provide facts or evidence It only claimed that religion harms

children

Page 76: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

EXAMPLE 3 To understand why "God does not exist" can be a legitimate

scientific statement, it's important to understand what the statement means in the context of science. When a scientist says "God does not exist," they mean something similar to when they say "aether does not exist," "psychic powers do not exist," or "life does not exist on the moon."

All such statements are casual short-hand for a more elaborate and technical statement: "this alleged entity has no place in any scientific equations, plays no role in any scientific explanations, cannot be used to predict any events, does not describe any thing or force that has yet been detected, and there are no models of the universe in which its presence is either required, productive, or useful."

Page 77: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

ANALYSIS What is the argument:

There is no empirical evidence that can only be attributed to God

If God exists, then he will produce empirical evidence

Therefore God does not exist.

Page 78: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

ANALYSIS What is the argument:

There is no empirical evidence that can only be attributed to God

If God exists, then he will produce empirical evidence

Therefore God does not exist. This is deductively valid (maybe) But is it True?

Page 79: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

ANALYSIS There is no empirical evidence that can

only be attributed to God If God exists, then he will produce

empirical evidence Therefore God does not exist.

We would disagree with the first premise, and maybe even the second premise!

XX

Page 80: Apologetics, Logic ,  And reasoning

CONCLUSION Logic can be a useful tool in

understanding arguments But arguments are rarely in logical form Therefore, it is useful to be able to

analyze arguments in logical form to find errors