-
Topics
Philosophy
Mind & Behavior
Business
-
Videos
Latest Videos
Why Einstein called awe the fundamental emotion If you’ve gotten goosebumps when hearing a story about a stranger’s selfless heroism, or you’ve felt your chest swell at...
How facing adversity can help you live a deeper, more meaningful life “There would be something very, very empty and meaningless about [a] sort of life with no problems.”
Can you measure love? 3 experts discuss From neuroscience to philosophy, experts reveal why compassion may be the most important human skill we have.
How accepting impermanence can end the struggle to “fix” your life “The idea is that we move from a place of wanting the world to conform to what we like [towards]...
How your cognitive biases lead to terrible investing behaviors “Let me walk you through the biggest traps that you should be aware of that are a danger to your...
Is free will a fallacy? Science and philosophy explain. Philosophy asks if free will is real. Neuroscience reveals why the answer is more complicated than we expected.
Why 2025 is the single most pivotal year in our lifetime "We're living in an extraordinary moment in history. We are at a moment here in 2025 where we have world...
Even AI is self-censoring. Here’s why that matters. If the people controlling AI are biased, the output will also be. Free speech scholar Jacob Mchangama makes the case... -
Columns
Columns
Mini Philosophy Mini Philosophy is a space to explore ideas. It’s where we pause the busyness of life to reflect on ourselves,...
Starts With A Bang Understand how the universe works with Ethan Siegel.
Books Big Ideas. Thoughtful Conversations. One Book at a Time.
The Long Game A Big Think Business column written by investor Eric Markowitz, focused on the philosophy and practice of long-term thinking.
Strange Maps
The Well Exploring life's biggest questions, publication by the John Templeton Foundation and Big Think.
13.8 A series exploring the beauty and power of science in culture by Adam Frank and Marcelo Gleiser. -
Classes
Featured Classes
- My Account
- More
Alvin Plantinga was not your stereotypical jock in high school. Though he played three sports, he was a deep thinker who, by the age of 8, was wrestling with the Calvinist view of total depravity, by 10 was grappling with determinism and predestination, and by 14 had read Plato's Dialogues.
By the time he finished middle school, Plantinga knew what he wanted to be when he grew up:
A philosopher.
That decision would ultimately bring two unlikely parties to the same table—faith and philosophy. Plantinga, now 84, has arguably played a bigger role than anyone in bridging the two fields. He has shown—through his writing and teaching—that faith is a reasonable, rational, intellectual and, yes, philosophical choice.
For more than 50 years, Plantinga, recent winner of the Templeton Prize, has “made theism—the belief in a divine reality or god—a serious option within academic philosophy."
Some of Plantinga's fellow believers were skeptical. So were many philosophers.
“Certain kinds of evangelical Christians thought philosophy was a bad idea," Plantinga said in a recent interview. “They thought it involved questioning the faith. Lots of people don't realize that philosophy comes in many varieties."
“Alvin Plantinga's intellectual discoveries have initiated novel inquiry into spiritual dimensions," wrote one philosopher who nominated Plantinga for the Templeton Prize. “His precise and carefully developed insights have opened up intellectual-spiritual space. In the 1950s there was not a single published defense of religious belief by a prominent philosopher; by the 1990s there were literally hundreds of books and articles . . . defending and developing the spiritual dimension. The difference between 1950 and 1990 is, quite simply, Alvin Plantinga."
Not irrational or senseless
“What I've always wanted to do as a philosopher," Plantinga said, “is defend a Christian way of thinking about things and argue that to be a Christian is not to be irrational or senseless or silly. It's certainly not a unanimous view among philosophers that you can reasonably be a Christian; but that's now one perfectly sensible view in the neighborhood."
The post A Theist and an Atheist Walk into a Bar . . . appeared first on ORBITER.
No transcript available for this video.