Suppose
something like Erich von Däniken’s Chariots of the
Gods?
hypothesis turned out to be true, and the God of the Bible was really an
extraterrestrial who had impressed the Israelites with some high tech. Would you conclude: “A ha! Those atheists sure have
egg on their faces now! Turns out the Bible was right! Well, basically
right, anyway. True, God’s nature isn’t
exactly what we thought it was, but He does exist after all!” Presumably not, no more than if the God of Exodus
turned out to be Moses with an amplifier and some red fizzies he’d dumped into
the Nile. The correct conclusion to draw
in either case would not be “God exists, but He wasn’t what He seemed” but
rather “God does not exist, He only seemed to.”
Or suppose something like Frank Tipler’s Omega Point
theory turned out to be correct and the universe is destined to evolve into a
vastly powerful supercomputer (to which Tipler ascribes a kind of divinity). If you had been inclined toward atheism, do
you think you would now conclude: “Wow, turns out God does exist, or at least will
exist someday!” Or rather only: “Wow, so
this really weird gigantic supercomputer will exist someday! Cool.
But what does that have to do with God?”


















