WHERE WE ARE
In Part 16 of this series, I pointed out a serious problem with Craig's sub-argument for the key premise (5c). The premises of this sub-argument are too UNCLEAR to be rationally evaluated. Thus, Craig's sub-argument, as it stands, fails to provide a good reason to believe that premise (5c) is true.
The only chance for Craig's sub-argument supporting premise (5c) to be successful is for us to figure out the meaning of his unclear premises, so that it will be possible to rationally evaluate whether those premises are true or false, probable or improbable. Otherwise, Craig's sub-argument for (5c) fails, and that would give us a third good reason to conclude that his case for the resurrection of Jesus fails.
THE SUB-ARGUMENT FOR PREMISE (5c)
Here, again, is the sub-argument for the key premise (5c):
D. The Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate than the alternative supernatural hypotheses.
B. The Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate than the alternative naturalistic hypotheses.
C1. A hypothesis H is the best explanation of a specific set of facts IF AND ONLY IF hypothesis H is a more plausible explanation of that set of facts than the alternative naturalistic hypotheses and the alternative supernatural hypotheses.
THEREFORE:
5c. The best explanation for Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate is the Resurrection Hypothesis (i.e., God raised Jesus from the dead).
I have put the UNCLEAR phrases in red italicized font, showing that all three premises in this sub-argument are infected with unclarity because of the problematic phrases.
NOTES ON MY REVISIONS TO CRAIG'S PHRASE
On page 360 of the 3rd edition of Reasonable Faith, where Craig summarizes his case for the resurrection, Craig actually uses a slightly different phrase:
"alternative naturalistic explanations"
However, when Craig discusses various examples of "alternative naturalistic explanations" later in the same chapter, he refers to them as "hypotheses" and "theories" as well as calling them "explanations". It is clear that Craig uses these various terms as more-or-less equivalent expressions.
In order to make the logic of Craig's argument clear, I regularized the vocabulary in the argument when I restated it. Because in his discussion, later in the chapter where he evaluates the various "naturalistic explanations," Craig usually refers to these explanations as "hypotheses", I have set aside the other terms (like "explanations" and "theories") and instead consistently use the term "hypotheses". That makes it easier to see logical connections between the premises. For, example to show a clear logical connection between premise (B) and premise (C1).
I have also inserted the definite article "the" at the front of Craig's original phrase from page 360. I have done so because the lack of the definite article makes the phrase somewhat vague.
The phrase "alternative naturalistic hypotheses" might be a reference to some such hypotheses, or to all such hypotheses, or to a specifically-characterized subset of such hypotheses. By inserting the word "the" at the start of the phrase, I draw attention to the potential vagueness of the scope of what is being referenced by this phrase. This potential vagueness should be eliminated, if possible, to make it clear what this phrase actually means. The use of the definite article "the" pushes us to clarify this phrase further.
ONE POSSIBLE SOLUTION TO CLARIFY THE UNCLEAR PHRASE "THE ALTERNATIVE NATURALISTIC HYPOTHESES"
Back in Part 3 of this series, it was necessary to clarify the meaning of this unclear phrase in Craig's argument:
"these three facts"
I suggested that we revise this phrase so that it was more descriptive and so it did not use the misleading term "facts":
"Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate"
I also suggested that we clarify the meaning of this new phrase by means of a definition:
A claim C is one of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate IF AND ONLY IF claim C is equivalent to either (HC1) or (HC2) or (HC3).
In order for this definition to be meaningful, we also needed to specify the claims that the abbreviations, such as (HC1), represent:
HC1:The tomb of Jesus was found empty by a group of his women followers on the first day of the week following his crucifixion.
HC2: Beginning on the first day of the week following Jesus' crucifixion, various individuals and groups experienced on different occasions and under varying circumstances appearances of Jesus alive.
HC3: The first disciples of Jesus came sincerely to believe in Jesus' resurrection in the absence of sufficient antecedent historical influences from either Judaism or pagan religions.
Someone might well suggest that we provide a similar definition of the unclear phrase "the alternative naturalistic hypotheses" which would include abbreviations that stand for each of the various naturalistic hypotheses, and then also provide a list of the specific naturalistic hypotheses corresponding to the abbreviations in the definition.
Craig discusses and evaluates a number of "alternative naturalistic hypotheses" later in the chapter[1], and names those hypotheses:
- The Conspiracy Hypothesis (CH): "the disciples stole the body of Jesus and lied about his postmortem appearances, thus faking the resurrection."[2]
- The Apparent Death Hypothesis (ADH): "Jesus was not completely dead when he was taken down from the cross. He revived in the tomb and escaped to convince his disciples he had risen from the dead."[3]
- The Wrong Tomb Hypothesis (WTH): "belief in Jesus' empty tomb was based on a simple mistake." Some women followers of Jesus went on Sunday morning to visit Jesus' tomb, and they found "an unoccupied tomb", but that was the "Wrong Tomb", not the tomb where Jesus had been buried on Friday evening.[4]
- The Displaced Body Hypothesis (DBH): Someone moved Jesus' body to a different tomb after Jesus was initially buried and before the women went to visit the tomb on Sunday morning.[5]
- The Hallucination Hypothesis (HH): "the resurrection appearances [of Jesus] were merely hallucinations on the part of the disciples."[6]
- The Christian Influence Hypothesis (CIH): "the disciples' belief in Jesus' resurrection...[was] a result of Christian influences" on their thinking.[7]
- The Pagan Influence Hypothesis (PIH):"the disciples' belief in Jesus' resurrection" was "the result of pagan influences" on their thinking.[7]
- The Jewish Influence Hypothesis (JIH): "the disciples' belief in Jesus' resurrection...[was] a result of Jewish influences" on their thinking.[8]
Since the above alternative hypotheses are the ones that Craig discusses in Chapter 8 of Reasonable Faith, we could define the unclear phrase "the alternative naturalistic hypotheses" as follows:
A hypothesis H is one of the alternative naturalistic hypotheses IF AND ONLY IF: hypothesis H is equivalent to one of the following hypotheses: (CH), (ADH), (WTH), (DBH), (HH), (CIH), (PIH), or (JIH).
In order to be meaningful, this definition would need to be accompanied by the above descriptions of the eight hypotheses represented by the eight abbreviations referenced in the proposed definition.
WHY THIS SOLUTION DOES NOT WORK
Although this proposed solution would help to clarify premise (B) and make it possible to rationally evaluate premise (B), this solution will not work. It will not help Craig's sub-argument to be successful.
The problem is that the same phrase is used in premise (C1), so the proposed definition of the phrase "the alternative naturalistic hypotheses" would also have to be applied to clarify the meaning of premise (C1).
But if we use the proposed definition to clarify that phrase in (C1), then premise (C1) would clearly be false. That would make Craig's sub-argument for the key premise (5c) an UNSOUND argument. Thus, Craig's sub-argument would fail, and this would give us a third good reason to conclude that Craig's case for the resurrection of Jesus fails.
THE PROPOSED DEFINITION MAKES (C1) FALSE
Here, once again, is the premise (C1):
C1. A hypothesis H is the best explanation of a specific set of facts IF AND ONLY IF hypothesis H is a more plausible explanation of that set of facts than the alternative naturalistic hypotheses and the alternative supernatural hypotheses.
Note that (C1) provides a very general principle concerning the rational evaluation of hypotheses. It is the generality of this principle that makes the principle appear plausible and true. This is not a principle that is just about the resurrection issue. It is a general epistemic principle. We could restrict the principle to just historical hypotheses, and the principle would still retain its plausibility.
But even if we were to restrict the scope of this principle to just historical hypotheses, the principle would clearly be false if we interpreted the phrase "the alternative naturalistic hypotheses" to refer only to eight historical hypotheses that are all about Jesus' final fate. The life and death of Jesus is only one of thousands of historical subjects or isssues that historians study.
Premise (C1) states a very general principle that could be applied to virtually any historical issue. In order for this principle to make sense and to have some degree of plausibility, we cannot restrict the meaning of the phrase "the alternative naturalistic hypotheses" so that it refers ONLY to historical hypotheses about Jesus' final fate. Therefore, we cannot accept the proposed definition of the unclear phrase "the alternative naturalistic hypotheses". Any acceptable definition of this phrase must allow premise (C1) to make sense, and to be plausible.
END NOTES
1. William Craig, Reasonable Faith, 3rd ed. (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2008), p.371-387. See also pages 390-395.
2. Reasonable Faith, p.371.
3. Reasonable Faith, p.373.
4. Reasonable Faith, p.374. Craig provides more details than what I mention here, based on Kirsopp Lake's specific version of this hypothesis. The details are unnecessary and actually make the hypothesis less probable, so I am ignoring those details. Additional details give the illusion of plausibility, but actually make the hypothesis less likely to be true.
5. Reasonable Faith, p.376. As with the Wrong Tomb Hypothesis, Craig adds unnecessary details based on Joseph Klausner's specific version of the Displaced Body Hypothesis. The additional details give the illusion of plausibility, but actually make the hypothesis less likely to be true. So, I am ignoring those additional details.
6. Reasonable Faith, p.354.
7. Reasonable Faith, p.390.
8. Reasonable Faith, p.393.


