Atheism and Theism 37
arisen. This could happen if the mass energy (which is positive) and the
gravitational energy (which is negative) wholly or nearly cancel out, thus
accounting for the coming into being of our universe from nothing at all.
Tryon’s idea is a very pretty one, but it does not answer the philosophical
question ‘Why should there be anything at all?’ It assumes a structured
space–time and the quantum field and also laws of nature (whatever these
are). (For example, if laws of nature are regularities there must be the cosmos
to exhibit the regularities.) Tryon’s idea has evidently been developed in
more sophisticated ways, but it seems to me that in much the same way they
do not answer the philosophical question, nor come to grips with the idea
of whether there must be an atemporal ‘cause’ for the whole caboodle of
a space–time universe.
Are there Suitable Senses of ‘a Necessary Being’?
So we are back to our question about whether the explanation of the existence
of contingent beings could be, as Aquinas, Copleston and other theologians
have thought, a necessary being. Is there a suitable sense of ‘necessary’?
One suggestion is that God might be necessary in the sense of not being
dependent on anything else for his existence. But then the atheist might say
that the universe itself will fill this bill. On the atheist view the universe has
nothing beyond itself and so cannot be dependent on anything else.^69 More-
over, if God is a necessary being only in this sense, his existence is no less
contingent than is that of the universe as the atheist conceives it. So if this
is the sense of ‘necessary’ in the argument from contingency of the world the
argument must be a bad one.
Another suggestion is that ‘God exists’ might have the sort of necessity
that ‘There is a prime number between 20 and 24’ has. This does seemto be
a clear case of a necessary yet existential proposition. I think that this analogy
between the necessary existence of numbers and that which it is supposed
God has is the most promising avenue for the theist to pursue, and yet I can
see that there may be problems with it. One problem is to get a grasp of the
‘necessary’ here. We have logical necessity, which is consistency in first order
logic. Then there is physical necessity which includes also consistency with
the laws of nature and perhaps also boundary conditions from cosmology.
There is legal necessity, consistency with obeying the laws of the land. And
so on. My own view, following Quine,^70 is that these forms of necessity, as
well as many more mundane uses of ‘necessary’ or ‘possible’ or cognate words
such as ‘must’, can be elucidated in a contextual way – as consistency in the
sense of first order logic with contextually agreed background assumptions.
(Those who believe in so-called ‘analytic propositions’ can throw them in
with the background assumptions.)