kellyb
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2006
- Messages
- 12,632
No, his argument was that only God explains why morals have value, that gives a difference between an 'is' and an 'ought'.
I agree it is an argument for God, but it isn't a GotG argument as far as I can see. At least as how I define the term, as I describe below.
I might be wrong, but I define a "God of the gaps" argument as the following:
1. A gap is identified in scientific knowledge, where the science of that time can't explain some phenomenon that has been observed.
2. Someone declares that the gap is evidence for God.
I take Pixel42's earlier point that a theist simply pointing to a gap can imply that God is the cause, even if they don't explicitly say that. So I agree that there is a grey area there that I should keep in mind. Still, I don't think that this makes Lewis's argument a GotG one. But if you have a different definition for GotG, then it may be more prudent to agree to disagree on this.
The reason I don't see it as a GotG argument (as I define it) is first we need to see what phenomenon that science is claiming has been validated without being able to explain. Has science validated "The Law of Human Nature, or of Right and Wrong"? Does scientific literature validate "a real law which we did not invent and which we know we ought to obey"? Not that I know of. There is no gap in science on the question because science does not address the question.
Again, if your definition of GotG differs from mine, you might validly disagree.
The "god of the gaps" is anything significantly mysterious enough and seemingly important enough to where someone somewhere feels a motivation to see it as only explainable as being the work of god. It can be anything from Lewis's idea of "The Law of Human Nature, or of Right and Wrong", to people seeing Jesus in a grilled cheese sandwich, to the question of what sparked the big bang.
I was actually taught about the "god of the gaps" in Christian school, to warn against thinking of god like that, or looking at anything mysterious as proof of god, because "the god which causes mysterious phenomena" had been in retreat for centuries, getting ever smaller with each discovery made.
Wiki is correct here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God_of_the_gaps
Origins of the term
The concept, although not the exact wording, goes back to Henry Drummond, a 19th-century evangelist lecturer, from his Lowell Lectures on The Ascent of Man. He chastises those Christians who point to the things that science can not yet explain—"gaps which they will fill up with God"—and urges them to embrace all nature as God's, as the work of "an immanent God, which is the God of Evolution, is infinitely grander than the occasional wonder-worker, who is the God of an old theology."[3][4]
In 1933, Ernest Barnes, the Bishop of Birmingham, used the phrase in a discussion of general relativity's implication of a Big Bang:
Must we then postulate Divine intervention? Are we to bring in God to create the first current of Laplace's nebula or to let off the cosmic firework of Lemaître's imagination? I confess an unwillingness to bring God in this way upon the scene. The circumstances with thus seem to demand his presence are too remote and too obscure to afford me any true satisfaction. Men have thought to find God at the special creation of their own species, or active when mind or life first appeared on earth. They have made him God of the gaps in human knowledge. To me the God of the trigger is as little satisfying as the God of the gaps. It is because throughout the physical Universe I find thought and plan and power that behind it I see God as the creator.[5]
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