Presuppositionalism

The only proof for the existence of God is that without God you couldn't prove anything.

Presuppositionalism is the idea that only the Christian worldview can account for logic, morality, science, induction, and consciousness itself and that all other worldviews are absurd. Presuppositionalists often go further and assert that both classical and evidential apologetics are sinful and blasphemous, as they savor "autonomy" and make human reason the judge of God's existence.

According to the presuppositionalists, nonbelievers (a term which, in their mouth, very often includes everyone from atheists to Christians not of the same worldview as the speaker) must assert the Reformed/Westminster Confession worldview in order to deny it; essentially, this is an accusation of stealing the concept, asserted by way of any of a number of the Transcendental arguments for God. Rather than argue directly for God, in the manner of classicists and evidentialists, presuppositionalism attempts to argue indirectly for God by trying to prove "the impossibility of the contrary," i.e., attempting a reductio ad absurdum on the opponent's worldview via internal critique.

Form of the argument
The argument goes something like this:


 * Old-School Apologist: Ears up, sinners! Here's an argument that God exists.
 * Recalcitrant Sinner: That argument's a pile of bunk! Here's why.
 * Old-School Apologist: Oh. Drat.
 * Presuppositional Apologist: Fear not, lions of Christ; here comes the new broom! Ears up, sinners! You say all the old-school arguments for God's existence are bunk?
 * Recalcitrant Sinner: Yep! In this moment, I am euphoric.
 * Presuppositional Apologist: Well, your refutations don't hold water, because they're grounded in the false presupposition that God doesn't exist.
 * Recalcitrant Sinner: Uh, no, they're not.
 * Presuppositional Apologist: They're grounded in a false presupposition, I say! Now if you'd just presuppose that God exists, it's obvious that God exists!
 * Recalcitrant Sinner: And you say we use circular logic…

Extension: transcendental argument for the existence of God

 * Presuppositional Apologist: Did you mention logic? Here is something new for you: every time you mention Laws of Logic, morality, and science you already presuppose God's existence, because knowledge, logic, morality, and science cannot exist without presupposing God.
 * Recalcitrant Sinner: That argument's also a pile of bunk! Defining the reference frame for Logic/morality/knowledge/science, even if it presupposes god, does not necessarily imply its existence.
 * Presuppositional Apologist: See, you just gave me more proof that God exists because you are using God-created logic, God-created science, and God-created morality!
 * Recalcitrant Sinner: But if that's true, the exact opposite of what you argue can be constructed using the exact same arguments, which means your argument's a pile of bunk, as I said!
 * Presuppositional Apologist: Blasphemer! If God said 2+2=5, then we've got five eyes between us!
 * Recalcitrant Sinner: Hello, fellows in white coats? We need you over here pronto.

Characteristics of the argument
Sye ten Bruggencate, among others, has said that the purpose of presuppositionalism is not so much to change minds as to "close mouths". Indeed, the argument garners little respect — among even conservative Christians. Even William Lane Craig, he of the "self-authenticating witness of the Holy Spirit", has said of presuppositionalism that it ought to be a transcendental argument instead (which is really not what one would call a glowing recommendation), stating:

Very few people find presuppositionalism convincing if they are not already believers, in other words.

Because most people have not delved particularly deeply into epistemology, presuppositionalism may catch them off-guard. It is extremely disconcerting; one gets the distinct impression that sleight of hand has been perpetrated, but is not able to see where and how. The strength of this argument is that, rather than trying to defeat its opponent in a race, it ties his shoelaces together so that he immediately falls on his face off the starting blocks.

There is thus a heavy element of psychological warfare in presuppositionalism, either of the coarse type evidenced by the Sye-clone brigade (repeated demandings of "could you be wrong about everything you know?!"), or a more subtle but no less infuriating facade of triumphalistic smugness from the slightly higher-caliber users of the method. In either case, what is notable is the lack of argumentation from the presups' side; it's a tar pit of an argument, and attempting to defend one's worldview is futile since, in his own mind, the presupper has already won the debate.

Nevertheless, there are several glaring flaws in the argument. It attempts to smuggle in several assumptions with the hope the opponent won't notice them: chiefly, it is unable to show that all opposing worldviews are incoherent.

The presuppositionalist will often say "the Bible isn't the evidence, it's the claim" — but the Bible is contingent on divine revelation, which itself is contingent on there being a God, not any specific one. Thus, the argument fatally lacks specificity; just substitute Allah for Yahweh and the Koran for the Bible as a counter-argument and the entire debate grinds to a halt. A deist could also run the argument just as well, and arguably better, since a deistic god communicates through nature, and does not rely on a collection of books full of known contradictions, inaccuracies, and outrages. An atheist could presuppose that consciousness, logic, etc., are simply brute facts, and claim a similar advantage.

Furthermore, one consequence of the transcendental argument family is that logic, knowledge, morality, consciousness, etc., are contingent upon God, therefore can be altered by him at will and, here's the key, without any of us necessarily knowing it. Van Til himself has said that God can take any fact and put it into a new relation with any other fact. In other words, God can lie, and we may not know when or if he/He does. This is commonly met by objections that God cannot lie, but 2 Thessalonians 2:11 specifically recounts God sending a "deluding influence" on people for the sole and explicit purpose of making them disbelieve the truth. Note that this is not a "lying spirit", something with agency of its own, but a "deluding influence" directly from God. So from the Bible itself, which the presuppositionalists are starting from, we know that God could lie, can lie, has lied, and very possibly still does lie.

Because they take the Bible as their pre-rational axiomatic concept, then, presuppositionalists have no grounds for assuming the uniformity of nature, their own consciousness, or even their own existence. Of course, this means they also have no grounds for the laws of logic, including the laws of identity and non-contradiction. Therefore, fittingly and poetically, the presuppositionalist is hoist by his own petard, destroyed by the very charges of epistemic guilt he seeks to lay on the opponent. Presuppositionalism is defeated by internal critique and by reductio ad absurdum; to even make its argument at all, its proponents must borrow lumber from another worldview.

Use by creationists
We agree that presuppositional apologetics is the ultimate biblical approach to apologetics. The common accusation that the presuppositionalist uses circular reasoning is actually true. In fact, everyone uses some degree of circular reasoning when defending his ultimate standard (though not everyone realizes this fact). Yet if used properly, this use of circular reasoning is not arbitrary and, therefore, not fallacious.

Creation Ministries International (CMI, evolved in 2006) has taken to peddling presuppositionalism. In the context of their particular arguments, this means that they have quit insisting that there is any particular evidence in favor of creationism (a necessary position, given that there is none) and started insisting that it is the interpretation of the evidence that the "evolutionists" have wrong, since they presuppose a naturalistic world-view; supposedly, if one interprets the evidence the right way (which involves not only assuming God's existence, but violating Occam's razor every which way to explain away all the contradictions), one will see that it leads undeniably to the Truth™ of God's existence. In other words, they presume that every human "knows" that a god exists (but only, somehow, the god of Abraham), and that the Scientific theory of evolution is simply a forgery from sinners made by "shoehorning evidence" in an attempt to pretend said god doesn't exist.

Jonathan Sarfati of CMI, in response to a piece on the complexity of the human genome, resorts to presuppositionalism:

But then, after insisting that "evolutionists" cannot have the deck stacked their way in an argument, later in the same article he then says that the creationists should be allowed to stack the deck their way:

In short, "Their presupposition is wrong because you're not allowed to use presuppositions we dislike. Our presupposition is right because you are required to use presuppositions we approve of". Irony at its best, making a biased and verifiably incorrect claim that evolution depends purely on religious presumptions (in their opinion, anti-abrahamic-god propaganda) and that it does not fit the mold of the evidence whatsoever, but that young-Earth creationism remains more valid nevertheless.

History
This approach to apologetics traces its modern origin to Cornelius Van Til (1895-1987), and to his student (1948-1995). Other exponents of the method include (1939- ) and, much more recently, Sye ten Bruggencate and a veritable detachment of similar "internet apologists" referred to as Sye-clones by their detractors. Currently the Presuppositional tactic is used the most frequently by the infamous Creationist Darth Dawkins and Matt Slick who runs the Christian Apologetics and Research Ministry. Ken Ham (1951- ) and Eric Hovind also employ the method as part of their creationist apologetics.

A separate branch of presuppositionalism, started by (1902-1985), differs from the van Tillian school in taking the Bible as an axiom; to no one's surprise, bitter disagreements sometimes ensue between the two camps, each of which has of course infallibly had the truth revealed to it.

Some useful presuppositions
An incomplete array of presuppositions as deployed by various proselytizers might include:


 * A God exists.
 * A unique God exists (pace Trinitarian polytheism).
 * Divine omnipotence can manifest as a deus ex machina - hence miracles.
 * Spirituality exists.
 * Humans (but not canines) have at least one soul.
 * An afterlife (as distinct from reincarnation) exists.
 * A universe (and its included and critters) implies creation.
 * God (see above) has something to do with the universe.
 * Humans (even post-modernists) should express gratitude to a feudal-style Lord.
 * Scripture traces various God/universe interactions.
 * One must recognise the correct approved canon (so, excluding the Qur'an) of scripture to avoid confusion.
 * Scripture has also been inspired by God so it's literally true and without errors.
 * All humans angst about origins.
 * Divine omniscience interacts in some mysterious way with free will.
 * Human nature inclines to (sin).
 * Sin provides the blessings of a consciousness of and a lust for salvation.
 * Humans each have something called a "life".
 * The idea of a "life" somehow implies something called
 * All humans angst about death.
 * Life is a but the afterlife (see above) can improve matters.