Tuesday, April 28, 2026

William Craig's Case for the Resurrection of Jesus - Part 16: The Final Argument for Premise (5c) Fails

 THE FINAL SUB-ARGUMENT FOR THE KEY PREMISE (5c)

The argument for the key premise (5c) consists of five inferences or sub-arguments, as can be seen in the argument diagram below:


Each red arrow represents an inference in the argument supporting premise (5c).  I am going to focus on the final sub-argument in this post, and in the next few posts. Here is the final sub-argument supporting 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). 

All of the other premises and inferences in the argument for (5c) provide support for premise (B), so it is clear that Craig's primary concern is to show that there is a good reason to believe that premise (B) is true. No evaluation of Craig's case for the resurrection would be complete without comments about whether Craig has provided us with a good reason to believe that (B) is true.

THE IMPORTANCE OF THE OTHER TWO PREMISES

However, the success of the final sub-argument for (5c) also depends on whether the other two premises are true or false, probable or improbable. If premise (D) is false or dubious, then Craig's argument for the key premise (5c) fails, and that would mean that Craig's case for the resurrection of Jesus also fails.

If premise (C1) is false or dubious, then Craig's argument for the key premise (5c) fails, and that would mean that Craig's case for the resurrection of Jesus also fails.

Thus, even though Craig focuses almost all of his attention on arguing for premise (B), the other two premises of the final sub-argument for (5c) are also crucially important for the success of his case for the resurrection of Jesus. 

THE FINAL SUB-ARGUMENT FOR PREMISE (5c) FAILS

 All three premises of Craig's final sub-argument for premise (5c) have a very serious problem: 

They are too UNCLEAR to be rationally evaluated.

In order to provide us with a good reason to believe the key premise (5c), the premises of Craig's final sub-argument for (5c) must be clear enough for us to rationally evaluate whether they are true or false, probable or improbable. But none of the three premises is sufficiently clear to be subject to rational evaluation.  Therefore, the final sub-argument for (5c) fails to provide us with a good reason to believe that the key premise (5c) is true.

The unclarity of the premises in the final sub-argument for (5c) is due to the unclarity of two phrases that occur in those premises:

"the alternative supernatural hypotheses"

"the alternative naturalistic hypotheses"

It is not at all clear what these two phrases mean, so the final sub-argument for the key premise (5c) cannot be rationally evaluated. Therefore, Craig's argument for (5c) fails to provide us with a good reason to believe that (5c) is true, and that means that we have a third good reason to conclude that Craig's case for the resurrection of Jesus fails.

THE ONLY HOPE FOR CRAIG'S FINAL SUB-ARGUMENT FOR (5c)

In order for someone to correctly evaluate the premises of Craig's final sub-argument for (5c) as being true or probable, the meaning of those premises must be clear enough to make it possible for them to be rationally evaluated.  So, the only hope for this argument to be successful, and to provide us with a good reason to believe that premise (5c) is true, is to figure out what the above two unclear phrases mean, and then either revise the wording of the three premises in this sub-argument or else provide clear definitions of the meaning of the two unclear phrases.

I suspect that premises (D) and (B) are dubious or false, but I cannot be confident of this unless and until I have a clear understanding of the meaning of those two premises. As things stand, I am not clear about what the two above unclear phrases mean, so I don't have a clear understanding of the meaning of premises (D) and (B).

CONCLUSION

As it stands, Craig's argument for the key premise (5c) fails, because the premises in the final sub-argument for (5c) are too unclear to be rationally evaluated.  Thus, Craig has failed to give us a good reason to believe that premise (5c) is true.

The only hope for Craig's argument for (5c) to be successful, is to figure out what the above two unclear phrases mean.

Monday, April 27, 2026

William Craig's Case for the Resurrection of Jesus - Part 15: The Transition from Historical Claims to Historical Facts

HISTORICAL CLAIMS VS. HISTORICAL FACTS

In Part 13 of this series, I figured out how to make the logical transition between premises talking about Craig's three key historical claims and premises talking about Craig's three key established historical facts.  However, when I recently clarified and revised the sub-argument for premise (5c), I lost track of that important bit of reasoning in Craig's core argument.  

Here is the way I represented that bit of reasoning in Part 13:

2c. Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate can be historically established as highly likely to be true, AND the Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate than the alternative naturalistic hypotheses.

 A1. A historical claim C is an established historical fact IF AND ONLY IF historical claim C can be historically established as highly likely to be true.

THEREFORE:

B. The Resurrection Hypothesis is more plausible explanation of Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate than the alternative naturalistic hypotheses.

NOTE: Sometimes Craig refers to naturalistic explanations, and sometimes he refers to naturalistic hypotheses. To make the logic of his core argument clearer, I have now regularized the vocabulary so that the argument consistently refers to naturalistic hypotheses

I think it would be clearer and helpful to separate the two claims made in premise (2c) into two premises:

2d. Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate can be historically established as highly likely to be true.

2e. The Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate than the alternative naturalistic hypotheses.

Premise (2e) can now be the premise that is supported by the two lines of reasoning that I described in Part 14 (one focused on comparative plausibility and the other focused on categorical plausibility), instead of premise (B).  

Given these revisions, we also need to revise the premises in the sub-arguments for (2e) so that they refer to Craig's three key historical claims, rather than to his three established historical facts. 

THE REVISED COMPARATIVE-PLAUSIBILITY SUB-ARGUMENT FOR PREMISE (2e)

Here is the revised comparative-plausibility sub-argument for premise (2e):

10a. The Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate than the Conspiracy Hypothesis.  

11a. The Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key 
historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate than the Apparent Death Hypothesis. 
  
12a. The Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate than the Wrong Tomb Hypothesis. 
 
13a. The Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate than the Displaced Body Hypothesis. 
 

14a. The Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate than the Hallucination Hypothesis.

K. The alternative naturalistic hypotheses that are competing with the Resurrection Hypothesis are: the Conspiracy Hypothesis, the Apparent Death Hypothesis, the Wrong Tomb Hypothesis, the Displaced Body Hypothesis, and the Hallucination Hypothesis.

THEREFORE: 

2e. The Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate than the alternative naturalistic hypotheses.

NOTE: I have added premise (K) to this sub-argument because that premise is needed to get from the five numbered premises about specific naturalistic hypotheses, to the conclusion (2e) with makes a claim about "the alternative naturalistic hypotheses" in general.

THE REVISED CATEGORICAL-PLAUSIBILITY SUB-ARGUMENT FOR PREMISE (2e)

Here is the revised categorical-plausibility sub-argument for premise (2e):

15a. The alternative naturalistic hypotheses are categorically-implausible explanations of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate.

16a. The Resurrection Hypothesis is a categorically- plausible explanation of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate.

E1. IF a hypothesis X is a categorically-plausible explanation of a specific set of historical claims, and  a hypothesis Y is a categorically implausible explanation for the same specific set of historical claims, THEN hypothesis X is a more plausible explanation for that specific set of historical claims than hypothesis Y.

THEREFORE:

 2e. The Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate than the alternative naturalistic hypotheses.

The premises of the sub-argument supporting premise (15a) also need to be revised to talk about historical claims rather than established historical facts:

F1. The Conspiracy Hypothesis is a categorically-implausible explanation of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate. 
 
G1. The Apparent Death Hypothesis is a categorically-implausible explanation of 
Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate. 
 
H1. The Wrong Tomb Hypothesis is a categorically-implausible explanation of 
Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate. 

I1. The Displaced Body Hypothesis is a categorically-implausible explanation of 
Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate. 

J1. The Hallucination Hypothesis is a categorically-implausible explanation of 
Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate. 

K. The alternative naturalistic hypotheses that are competing with the Resurrection Hypothesis are: the Conspiracy Hypothesis, the Apparent Death Hypothesis, the Wrong Tomb Hypothesis, the Displaced Body Hypothesis, and the Hallucination Hypothesis.

THEREFORE: 

15a. The alternative naturalistic hypotheses are categorically-implausible explanations of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate.

NOTE: I have added premise (K) to this sub-argument because that premise is needed to get from the five other premises about specific naturalistic hypotheses, to the conclusion (15a) with makes a claim about "the alternative naturalistic hypotheses" in general.

THE REVISED ARGUMENT DIAGRAM SHOWING THE LOGICAL STRUCTURE OF THE SUB-ARGUMENT FOR (5c)

The final inference or sub-argument supporting the key premise (5c) is this:

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).

Sunday, April 26, 2026

William Craig's Case for the Resurrection of Jesus - Part 14: Craig's Two Lines of Reasoning for the Resurrection

WHERE WE ARE

Craig's case for the resurrection of Jesus can be summarized this way:

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).

THEREFORE: 

8. The best explanation of the established historical facts that are relevant to Jesus' final fate is the Resurrection Hypothesis (i.e., God raised Jesus from the dead). 

THEREFORE:

9. It is more likely than not that God raised Jesus from the dead.

In Part 6 of this series, I argued that Craig's case for the resurrection of Jesus was Dead on Arrival, because the final inference from (8) to (9) is weak and dubious. 

In Part 4 and Part 5 of this series, I argued that Craig's case for the resurrection of Jesus was Dead on Arrival because the inference from (5c) to (8) is weak and dubious.[1]  

Thus, it is clear that Craig's case for the resurrection of Jesus was Dead on Arrival

DID CRAIG PROVIDE A GOOD REASON TO BELIEVE PREMISE (5c)?

Because the key premise (5c) is neither obviously true nor self-evident, Craig needs to give us a good reason to believe that this key premise of his core argument is true. If Craig has failed to give us a good reason to believe that (5c) is true, then we may reasonably conclude that premise (5c) is dubious, and that would be a third good reason to conclude that Craig's case for the resurrection of Jesus (in Chapter 8 of the 3rd edition of Reasonable Faith) FAILS.

I previously indicated that I would be critically evaluating a modified instance of a simplified version of Craig's sub-argument for the key premise (5c) in his core argument. This particular sub-argument is based on one interpretation of the ambiguous phrase "shown to be implausible" in Craig's argument for premise (5c). 

This ambiguous phrase has two possible meanings:

"shown to be categorically implausible" (without reference to the plausibility or implausibility of the alternative hypotheses)

"shown to be comparatively more implausible" (than the alternative hypotheses)

I had decided to try out the comparative-plausibility interpretation first, because that interpretation immediately clarified Craig's sub-argument, while the categorical-plausibility interpretation left the meaning of his premises vague (thus requiring further effort to clarify those premises). 

However, since publishing Part 13, it has occurred to me that Craig might well have had BOTH interpretations of this ambiguous phrase in mind.  I suspect he was confused and failed to clearly distinguish these two different ideas.  

However, we can separate these two ideas and specify two different lines of reasoning supporting a premise in the sub-argument for (5c).  Rather than trying to figure out which interpretation of this ambiguous phrase is correct, I think it is better, and more charitable to Craig, to clarify his reasoning supporting a premise of his sub-argument for (5c) by splitting that reasoning into two different lines of reasoning. That is what I am going to do in this post.

THE COMPARATIVE-PLAUSIBILITY SUB-ARGUMENT FOR PREMISE (5c)

In Part 13, I worked out a simplified and improved version of Craig's sub-argument for his key premise (5c), based on the comparative-plausibility interpretation of the ambiguous phrase "shown to be implausible":

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).

THE COMPARATIVE-PLAUSIBILITY SUB-ARGUMENT FOR PREMISE (B) 

Premise (B) makes a comparative plausibility claim. Furthermore, Craig actually argues for premise (B) based on the following more specific comparative plausibility claims:

10. The Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate than the Conspiracy Hypothesis.  

11. The Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate than the Apparent Death Hypothesis. 
  
12. The Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate than the Wrong Tomb Hypothesis. 
 
13. The Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate than the Displaced Body Hypothesis. 
 
14. The Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate than the Hallucination Hypothesis.

However, Craig also strongly hints at a different line of reasoning that supports premise (B) on the basis of categorical-plausibility claims.

THE CATEGORICAL-PLAUSIBILITY SUB-ARGUMENT FOR PREMISE (B)

I believe that Craig had in mind another line of reasoning that supports premise (B), whether he realized this or not:

15. The alternative naturalistic hypotheses are categorically implausible explanations of Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate.

16. The Resurrection Hypothesis is a categorically plausible explanation of Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate.

E. IF a hypothesis X is a categorically plausible explanation of a specific set of facts, and  a hypothesis Y is a categorically implausible explanation for the same specific set of facts, THEN hypothesis X is a more plausible explanation for that specific set of facts than hypothesis Y.

THEREFORE:

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.

Premise (E) appears to be a self-evident analytic truth. If we divide various hypotheses into the categories of "plausible" and "implausible", then the hypotheses that are determined to be plausible are obviously going to be more plausible than the hypotheses that we have determined to be implausible.  So, premise (E) allows us to infer a comparative-plausibility claim, like (B), from categorical-plausibility claims, like (15) and (16).

THE CATEGORICAL-PLAUSIBILITY SUB-ARGUMENT FOR PREMISE (15)

Premise (15) needs to be argued for on the basis of these more specific categorical-plausibility claims:

F. The Conspiracy Hypothesis is a categorically-implausible explanation of Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate. 
 
G. The Apparent Death Hypothesis is a categorically-implausible explanation of Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate. 
 
 
H. The Wrong Tomb Hypothesis is a categorically-implausible explanation of Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate. 
 

I. The Displaced Body Hypothesis is a categorically-implausible explanation of Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate. 
 

J. The Hallucination Hypothesis is a categorically-implausible explanation of Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate.  

I'm not sure (at this point) that Craig actually argues for all of these specific categorical-plausibility claims (while I am sure that Craig argues for all of the specific comparative-plausibility claims), but in making the more general claim (15) about the alternative naturalistic hypotheses, Craig implies that these more specific claims are all true.

ARGUMENT DIAGRAM FOR THE CLARIFIED VERSION OF CRAIG'S SUB-ARGUMENT FOR THE KEY PREMISE (5c)

Here is my revised argument diagram of the sub-argument supporting the key premise (5c), which includes both the comparative-plausibility line of reasoning and the categorical-plausibility line of reasoning for premise (B):

CONCLUSION

There is no need to determine which of the two possible interpretations of the ambiguous phrase "shown to be implausible" is the correct interpretation, because we can use both senses of this phrase in two different lines of reasoning in support of premise (B), which is a premise in the clarified instance of a simplified version of Craig's sub-argument for the key premise (5c).  

I'm confident that Craig's case for the resurrection of Jesus includes the comparative-plausibility line of reasoning in support of premise (B).  I'm not as confident that Craig's case also includes the categorical-plausibility line of reasoning in support of premise (B), but there are significant indications that Craig also had that other line of reasoning in mind. So, my current understanding and interpretation of Craig's case includes both lines of reasoning in support of premise (B).

END NOTES

1. Actually, I argued that the inference from (5a) to (8) was weak and dubious. But the same objection to that inference (i.e., the problem of confirmation bias) applies to the inference from (5c) to (8).   

Friday, April 24, 2026

William Craig's Case for the Resurrection of Jesus - Part 13: The Revised Sub-Argument for the Key Premise (5c)

WHERE WE ARE

Premise (3b) is part of a sub-argument for the key premise (5c) in Craig's core argument for the resurrection of Jesus.  In Part 9 of this series, I gave a good reason to believe that premise (3b) is false.  

However, Craig provided a sub-argument in support of premise (3b), so we should give serious consideration to that sub-argument before making a final determination about the truth or falsehood of premise (3b).

As it stands, however, Craig's sub-argument for premise (3b) fails to give a good reason for believing that (3b) is true.  That is because the premises of that sub-argument are too unclear for them to be rationally evaluated in terms of their truth or falsehood. 

One of the unclear phrases used in the premises of the sub-argument for (3b) is this: 

"shown to be implausible"

In Part 11 of this series, I pointed out that the phrase "shown to be implausible" was ambiguous between two possible interpretations:

"shown to be categorically implausible" (without reference to the plausibility or implausibility of the alternative hypotheses)

"shown to be comparatively more implausible" (than the alternative hypotheses)

Because it is not clear which of these interpretations is correct, and because the comparatively-implausible interpretation makes the meaning of the premises clear, while the categorically-implausible interpretation leaves the meaning of the premises vague (and thus requires additional effort of further clarification), I decided to try out the comparatively-implausible interpretation first.

THE REVISED AND CLARIFIED VERSION OF THE SUB-ARGUMENT FOR PREMISE (3b)

Here is the revised and clarified version of the sub-argument for the third premise, using the comparatively-plausible interpretation of the unclear phrase "shown to be implausible":

1c. IF Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate can be historically established as highly likely to be true AND the alternative naturalistic explanations can be shown to be comparatively more implausible explanations of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate than the Resurrection Hypothesis, THEN IF IT IS NOT THE CASE THAT the Resurrection Hypothesis (i.e. God raised Jesus from the dead) has been shown to be more implausible than the alternative naturalistic explanations for Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate, THEN the best  explanation for Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate is the Resurrection Hypothesis (i.e., God raised Jesus from the dead).

2b. Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate can be historically established as highly likely to be true AND the alternative naturalistic hypotheses can be shown to be comparatively more implausible explanations of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate than the Resurrection Hypothesis.

 A1. A historical claim C is an established historical fact IF AND ONLY IF historical claim C can be historically established as highly likely to be true.

THEREFORE: 

3b. IF IT IS NOT THE CASE THAT the Resurrection Hypothesis (i.e. God raised Jesus from the dead) has been shown to be more implausible than the alternative naturalistic hypotheses for Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate, THEN 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).

On this interpretation, the first premise contains redundant requirements and is thus more complicated and cumbersome than is necessary, and the second premise now appears to make a strong claim that could be the basis for a simpler and clearer argument for the key premise (5c) (on these points see Part 12).

If we go with the comparatively-implausible interpretation of the unclear phrase "shown to be implausible", then it would be best to ignore Craig's sub-argument for premise (3b) and re-state that argument as a simpler and clearer argument that directly supports the key premise (5c).

THE RE-STATED SUB-ARGUMENT FOR PREMISE (5c)

Here is the re-stated sub-argument for the key premise (5c):

2c. Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate can be historically established as highly likely to be true, AND the Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate than the alternative naturalistic hypotheses.

 A1. A historical claim C is an established historical fact IF AND ONLY IF historical claim C can be historically established as highly likely to be true.

THEREFORE:

B. The Resurrection Hypothesis is more plausible explanation of Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate than the alternative naturalistic 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).

This is how we should understand Craig's sub-argument for the key premise (5c) if we clarify the unclear phrase "shown to be implausible" in terms of the comparatively-implausible interpretation of that phrase. 

NOTE: I dropped the unnecessary phrase "can be shown to be" from the second claim asserted in the second premise, and I substituted the simpler and more straightforward word "is".  Craig is making a claim here that he will back up with evidence and arguments later in the chapter. In presenting the summary of his argument, Craig should simply assert this claim for now and then later on attempt to show the claim to be true. There is no need while presenting a summary of his case to hint at his upcoming effort (later in the chapter) to back up this claim with evidence and arguments.

As I mentioned in Part 12 of this series, the above re-stated argument for the key premise (5c) appears to correctly capture Craig's reasoning, because it lines up well with a one-sentence summary that Craig gave of his argument for the resurrection of Jesus:

If these three facts can be established, and no plausible natural explanation can account for them as well as the resurrection hypothesis, then one is justified in inferring Jesus' resurrection as the most plausible explanation of the data. (Reasonable Faith, 3rd ed., p.361)

EVALUATION OF THE RE-STATED SUB-ARGUMENT FOR PREMISE (5c) 

I don't have a problem with the definition of "an established historical fact" given in premise (A1), assuming it is understood as implying that the relevant evidence shows that there is at least an 80% chance that the historical claim is true.

Both of the claims asserted in premise (2c) are strong claims that appear to me to be false or dubious, so this sub-argument is not acceptable as it stands.  Further argument by Craig is required to support the two strong claims made in premise (2c).

The inference to premise (B) appears to be a valid deductive inference. Premise (B) is logically implied by the combination of premises (2c) and (A1). The argument does not have a standard deductive form, but Craig's three historical claims, according to premise (2c) have the characteristics required by the definition given in (A1), so we may infer from (2c) that those three claims are "established historical facts". 

The inference from (B) to (5c), however, is logically invalid. Premise (B) does not logically imply the conclusion (5c). Thus, this argument is unsound, at least as it stands.

Because the final inference in this sub-argument for (5c) is invalid, we should reject this sub-argument, and that means that Craig has failed to provide a good reason to believe the key premise (5c).  Since premise (5c) is neither obviously true nor self-evident, Craig's failure to give us a good reason to believe (5c) means that this key premise of his core argument is dubious.  Therefore, we have a third good reason to conclude that Craig's core argument for the resurrection of Jesus fails.

However, there might be a way to fix the problem with this final inference in the sub-argument for the key premise (5c). Before we reject this sub-argument, we should make an effort to repair it.

THE INFERENCE FROM (B) TO (5c)

There is a logical gap between premise (B) and premise (5c). 

One reason for this gap is that (B) talks about the Resurrection Hypothesis being a more plausible explanation than the other hypotheses, while (5c) talks about the Resurrection Hypothesis being the best explanation.  We can bridge this particular gap by adding a definition of "the best explanation" to the final inference of the sub-argument:

B. The Resurrection Hypothesis is more plausible explanation of Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate than the alternative naturalistic hypotheses.

C. 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. 

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).

The inference from premises (B) and (C) to (5c) appears to be a valid deductive inference.  Those premises logically imply the key premise (5c).

However, the definition of "the best explanation" given in premise (C) is clearly mistaken. There are other supernatural hypotheses besides the Resurrection Hypothesis. It is possible that some other supernatural hypothesis explains Craig's three historical facts as well as (or better than) the Resurrection Hypothesis.  In that case, the Resurrection Hypothesis would NOT be the best explanation of Craig's three key facts, contrary to the definition given in premise (C).  Therefore, premise (C) is false, and the above sub-argument is unsound and should be rejected.

The definition given in premise (C) can be modified to get around the counterexample of an alternative supernatural explanation to the Resurrection Hypothesis:

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. 

But if we make this modification to the definition of "the best explanation", then the inference in the above sub-argument would become logically invalid. There is nothing in the premises of the sub-argument that rules out the existence of a supernatural explanation that is as plausible as (or more plausible than) the Resurrection Hypothesis.

The definition of "the best explanation" will either be mistaken (false) because it neglects the possiblity of alternative supernatural explanations, or the definition will be correct (true) because it includes a reference to alternative supernatural explanations, but then the inference in the sub-argument will be logically invalid.

So, the sub-argument for (5c) cannot be repaired simply by adding a definition of "the best explanation" to it.

REPAIRED INSTANCE OF THE SIMPLIFIED VERSION OF CRAIG'S SUB-ARGUMENT FOR (5c)

We can, however, fix the argument by adding another premise, namely premise (D), about alternative supernatural explanations:

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).

This modification of the simplified version of Craig's sub-argument for the key premise (5c) appears to be logically valid, and the definition of "the best explanation" in premise (C1) appears to be correct. So, this is probably about the best we can do to repair Craig's otherwise failing sub-argument for premise (5c). In the next part of this series, I will critically examine this modified instance of the simplified version of Craig's argument for (5c).

Thursday, April 23, 2026

William Craig's Case for the Resurrection of Jesus - Part 12: A Revision of Craig's Sub-Argument for (3b)

THE SUB-ARGUMENT FOR PREMISE (3b)

Here is Craig's sub-argument for premise (3b):

1b. IF Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate can be historically established with a reasonable degree of confidence AND alternative naturalistic hypotheses for Craig's three key  historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate can be shown to be implausible, THEN IF IT IS NOT THE CASE THAT the Resurrection Hypothesis (i.e. God raised Jesus from the dead) has been shown to be more implausible than the alternative naturalistic hypotheses for explaining Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate, THEN the best  explanation for Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate is the Resurrection Hypothesis (i.e., God raised Jesus from the dead).

2a. Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate can be historically established with a reasonable degree of confidence AND the alternative naturalistic hypotheses for explaining Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate can be shown to be implausible.

 A. A historical claim C is an established historical fact IF AND ONLY IF historical claim C can be historically established with a reasonable degree of confidence.

THEREFORE: 

3b. IF IT IS NOT THE CASE THAT the Resurrection Hypothesis (i.e. God raised Jesus from the dead) has been shown to be more implausible than the alternative naturalistic explanations for explaining Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate, THEN 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).

In Part 10 of this series, I argued that all three premises of this sub-argument for (3b) are unclear, and their unclarity is significant enough that it precludes rational evaluation of the truth or falsity of these premises. For this reason, Craig's sub-argument fails to provide us with a good reason to believe that (3b) is true.

However, if we can manage to clarify the meaning of the premises in this sub-argument, then we might well be able to rationally evaluate the truth or falsehood of these premises. So, clarifying the premises would give Craig's sub-argument for (3b) a chance of being a successful argument. 

PROPOSED CLARIFICATIONS OF THE PREMISES 

There are at least two unclear phrases in the premises of Craig's sub-argument for (3b):

 "historically established with a reasonable degree of confidence"

"shown to be implausible"

In Part 11 of this series, I proposed an interpretation that would clarify the phrase "historically established with a reasonable degree of confidence".  I argued that a "reasonable degree of confidence" means that the historical claim in question is "highly likely" or "very probable" (which I take to mean that the historical evidence shows the claim to have at least an 80% chance of being true).

In Part 11 of this series, I pointed out that the phrase "shown to be implausible" was ambiguous between two possible interpretations:

"shown to be categorically implausible" (without reference to the plausibility or implausibility of the alternative hypotheses)

"shown to be comparatively more implausible" (than the alternative hypotheses)

Although it is unclear which of these two interpretations is correct, I will try out the comparative-implausibility interpretation first, because the meaning of the premises is clear on that interpretation.  The categorical-implausibility interpretation leaves the meaning of the premises vague.  Further work will be required (at a later time) to narrow down what is intended by a claim of categorical implausibility

A REVISED AND CLARIFIED VERSION OF THE SUB-ARGUMENT FOR (3b)

Here is a revised and clarified version of Craig's sub-argument for premise (3b):

1c. IF Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate can be historically established as highly likely to be true AND the alternative naturalistic hypotheses can be shown to be comparatively more implausible explanations of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate than the Resurrection Hypothesis, THEN IF IT IS NOT THE CASE THAT the Resurrection Hypothesis (i.e. God raised Jesus from the dead) has been shown to be more implausible than the alternative naturalistic hypotheses for explaining Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate, THEN the best  explanation for Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate is the Resurrection Hypothesis.

2b. Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate can be historically established as highly likely to be true AND the alternative naturalistic hypotheses can be shown to be comparatively more implausible explanations of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate than the Resurrection Hypothesis.

 A1. A historical claim C is an established historical fact IF AND ONLY IF historical claim C can be historically established as highly likely to be true.

THEREFORE: 

3b. IF IT IS NOT THE CASE THAT the Resurrection Hypothesis (i.e. God raised Jesus from the dead) has been shown to be more implausible than the alternative naturalistic hypotheses for explaining Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate, THEN the best explanation for Craig's three key established historical facts concerning Jesus' final fate is the Resurrection Hypothesis.

Given this revision and clarification of Craig's sub-argument for (3b), the first premise of this sub-argument now seems to involve redundant requirements making that premise longer and more cumbersome than is necessary. This is a reason for doubting the correctness of the comparative-implausibility interpretation of the unclear phrase "shown to be implausible".

Nevertheless, the categorical-implausibility interpretation of the unclear phrase "shown to be implausible" has its own problems, so this problem of redundancy in the first premise is not a decisive reason for rejecting the above comparative-plausibility interpretation.

The redundance in premise (1c) is between the requirement that "alternative naturalistic explanations for Craig's three key historical claims...can be shown to be comparatively more implausible than the Resurrection Hypothesis" and the requirement in the conditional statement in the second half (the consequent) of that premise: "IF IT IS NOT THE CASE THAT the Resurrection Hypothesis...has been shown to be more implausible than the alternative naturalistic explanations ...".  

It is obvious that if each of the naturalistic hypotheses is more implausible than the Resurrection Hypothesis, then the Resurrection Hypothesis is NOT going to be more implausible than the naturalistic hypotheses! Thus, the requirement that the Resurrection Hypothesis NOT be more implausible than the naturalistic hypotheses is redundant and makes the statement of this first premise unnecessarily complicated and cumbersome.

EVALUATION OF THE CLARIFIED SUB-ARGUMENT FOR (3b)

In fact, on this interpretation of the sub-argument for (3b), the conclusion need not be a conditional statement at all.  The implied conclusion appears to be this:

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).

In any case, premise (1c) appears to be true, assuming that the five naturalistic hypotheses discussed by Craig are either ALL of the available alternative hypotheses, or that they constitute the best (the most plausible) of the available alternative hypotheses. If each of the available alternative hypotheses is more implausible than the Resurrection Hypothesis, then the Resurrection Hypothesis is the most plausible explanation, and is thus the best explanation. 

However, if there is just one available hypothesis that Craig has failed to examine, then that unexamined hypothesis might be as plausible as or more plausible than the Resurrection Hypothesis. In that case, the Resurrection Hypothesis would NOT be the best explanation of Craig's three key historical facts.

On this comparative-implausibility interpretation, the weight of the sub-argument is borne primarily by the second premise:

2b. Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate can be historically established as highly likely to be true AND the alternative naturalistic hypotheses can be shown to be comparatively more implausible explanations of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate than the Resurrection Hypothesis.

The second conjunct in premise (2b) basically asserts that the Resurrection Hypothesis provides the most plausible explanation of Craig's three historical claims. Given this understanding, Craig's sub-argument for (3b) is unnecessary

A CLEAR AND SIMPLE ARGUMENT FOR KEY PREMISE (5c) 

Craig could have used this strong claim made in (2b) to make a simpler and clearer argument to directly support the key premise (5c) of his core argument:

2c. Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate can be historically established as highly likely to be true, AND the Resurrection Hypothesis is a more plausible explanation of Craig's three key historical claims concerning Jesus' final fate than the alternative naturalistic hypotheses.

 A1. A historical claim C is an established historical fact IF AND ONLY IF historical claim C can be historically established as highly likely to be true.

THEREFORE:

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.

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).

So, if we go with the comparative-implausibility interpretation of the unclear phrase "shown to be implausible", then we should ignore Craig's overly complicated sub-argument for premise (3b) and reformulate it as the above simple and clear sub-argument for the key premise (5c).

I dropped the unnecessary phrase "can be shown to be" from the second claim asserted in the second premise, and I substituted the simpler and more straightforward word "is".  Craig is making a claim here that he will back up with evidence and arguments later in the chapter. In presenting the summary of his argument, Craig should simply assert this claim and then attempt to show the claim to be true later. There is no need in his summary to hint at his upcoming effort (later in the chapter) to back up this claim with evidence and arguments.

In the paragraph immediately following the long paragraph where Craig presents his core argument, Craig gives a summary of his argument in just one sentence:

If these three facts can be established, and no plausible natural explanation can account for them as well as the resurrection hypothesis, then one is justified in inferring Jesus' resurrection as the most plausible explanation of the data. (Reasonable Faith, 3rd ed., p.361)

This one-sentence summary looks very similar to the above sub-argument for premise (5c). This is evidence that my re-statement of Craig's sub-argument for (5c) represents the reasoning that Craig had in mind (but that he stated in a somewhat unclear and overly complicated manner).

I will attempt to critically evaluate this re-stated sub-argument for (5c) in the next post.

William Craig's Case for the Resurrection of Jesus - Part 16: The Final Argument for Premise (5c) Fails

  THE FINAL SUB-ARGUMENT FOR THE KEY PREMISE (5c) The argument for the key premise (5c) consists of five inferences or sub-arguments, as can...