Categories: World

ChatGPT says it’s a fact that God exists

I wonder if you’ll find this as fascinating as I do: a smart atheist has a conversation with ChatGPT over one of the major arguments for God’s existence, with the conclusion being ChatGPT saying it’s a fact that God exists.

The atheist in question is Alex O’Connor, known as the Cosmic Skeptic and host of the Within Reason podcast, where he regularly talks with both atheists and believers. To be precise, Alex is what’s called an “agnostic atheist,” a position that encompasses both atheism and agnosticism. Agnostic atheists default to atheism because they don’t acknowledge any supernatural deity and claim the existence of one is either unknowable in principle or currently unknown in fact.

I wonder which way Alex is leaning now? You can watch the video of his ChatGPT discussion here, in which he throws the argument from contingency at the AI bot to see what will happen.

If you’re not aware, the argument from contingency starts with the idea that everything in the universe is either a necessary being or a contingent being. Since not everything can be contingent (dependent on something else for its existence), there must be a necessary being (a being that exists by its own nature, not because of something else) that is the ultimate cause or explanation for the existence of all contingent beings.

Alex began his discussion with the AI bot by asking only for facts vs. beliefs and discussing why something like the microphone he uses in the video exists. The response from ChatGPT was spot on: “The presence of the microphone means there’s a reason or a cause for it being there, whether someone placed it there or it was set up for a purpose … Ultimately, any chain of explanations either leads back to something necessary or continues through a series of contingent events.”

But the thing is, as both atheists and believers have pointed out, an infinite regress of contingent events can’t cause or explain why something like a microphone or we are here. ChatGPT put it to Alex this way: “The idea that a purely infinite regress of contingent causes would lack an ultimate source of causal power is a logical implication based on the nature of contingency. If every contingent thing depends on something else for its causal power and there’s no necessary source, then ultimately there wouldn’t be any causal power to sustain the chain. This conclusion isn’t just a popular philosophical view. It follows logically from the facts about contingency and causation we discussed.”

That last part I find particularly important: ChatGPT isn’t hallucinating or making things up; it’s simply proceeding logically with reason and facts that can be historically verified in response to Alex’s questions. Feel free to check out the argument’s flow in the video to see what I mean.  

Traditionally, the proposal for what that “causal power to sustain the chain” is has bottomed out at either the universe or a creator God. Alex knows this, so he next turns to whether the universe is eternal and ChatGPT tells him no — that the universe had a beginning: “According to our current scientific understanding, the universe had a beginning around 13.8 billion years ago, often described as the Big Bang. This means it hasn’t existed eternally in the past but had a specific starting point.”

At this point, Alex could have thrown the multiverse option at the AI bot, which is a theoretical framework and not a currently proven scientific fact, but he doesn’t go there. Maybe this is because Dr. Alexander Vilenkin shot that proposal down in his “State of the Universe” paper, which was presented at the 70th birthday celebration of Stephen Hawking that took place in January 2012. Vilenkin summed up his talk by saying: “All the evidence we have says that the universe had a beginning.”

And if our universe or any multiverse has a beginning, they have a cause and are not eternal. 

The next exchanges between Alex and ChatGPT represent the logical next steps you can take on the subject:

Of course, the AI bot isn’t declaring the God of the Bible exists, but in this case, that’s not the big point for me in Alex’s video and ChatGPT conversation. Rather, it’s that belief in a Creator is not unreasonable, childish, or unsupported by evidence as many atheists assert. Instead, whether it’s the argument from contingency or other well-known cases that have been made, belief in God is a logical and sound position to hold.

Or, to put it in ChatGPT’s language, it’s a fact that God exists.  

Facebook Comments
C Carlos

Share
Published by
C Carlos

Recent Posts

I came back from surgery. Here is what I learned

Thousands came to Christ. And many — including me — were called into ministry. #Worship…

10 hours ago

What David Taylor teaches us about false prophets

It really hurts and bothers me to see people fall for the deception and abuse…

10 hours ago

Nigerian Christians held hostage, starved at Fulani terror camps, advocates warn

A radical Fulani tribe that advocates say is "hell-bent on turning Nigeria into a caliphate"…

10 hours ago

Herdsmen Attack Christian Area in North-Central Nigeria

The rebranding of the military effort in Nigeria’s North-Central Region to Operation Enduring Peace was…

19 hours ago

A last thank you to the greatest generation

Mr. McPherson is one of the last of that extraordinary generation of men who left…

1 day ago

Israel rejects Hamas offer to release hostages in return for end of war, demands full surrender

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday rejected Hamas’ statement, which declared the terror group’s willingness…

1 day ago