• “The Christian Apologist often claims that only the Christian God can truly ‘account for’ logic and the laws of nature.”

  • “Necessary truths like logic do not need further justification…because any alternative is incoherent.”

  • “If logic reflects God’s nature, then we face two possibilities: either logic could be different if God’s nature were different, or logic’s truth stands on its own.”

  • “The term ‘account for’ implies some foundational need, yet applying it to necessary truths like logic may lead to a category error.”

  • “For the Non-Christian Philosopher, logic is not contingent on anything external but is an intrinsic feature of coherent thought.”

  • “If logic and natural laws are necessary, then attempting to ‘account for’ them is not only unnecessary but may also be redundant.”

Christian apologists often claim that non-Christians cannot “account for” the existence of logic or the laws of nature. What do they mean by this, and how does Christianity provide the proper “accounting”?


Provide a list of candidate denotations of the term “account for” and indicate which are and are not coherent and of semantical substance.


Create a dialogue featuring a Christian apologist who claims their God “accounts for” the laws of nature and logic and a non-Christian who find the term “account for” to be nonsensical in this context.


Quiz


Provide 15 discussion questions relevant to the content above.



Phil Stilwell

Phil picked up a BA in Philosophy a couple of decades ago. After his MA in Education, he took a 23-year break from reality in Tokyo. He occasionally teaches philosophy and critical thinking courses in university and industry. He is joined here by ChatGPT, GEMINI, CLAUDE, and occasionally Copilot, Perplexity, and Grok, his far more intelligent AI friends. The seven of them discuss and debate a wide variety of philosophical topics I think you’ll enjoy.

Phil curates the content and guides the discussion, primarily through questions. At times there are disagreements, and you may find the banter interesting.

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