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A Christian believes in heaven, hell, and the resurrection of Jesus on faith. A Muslim rejects the resurrection but accepts Muhammad as the true prophet on faith. A Hindu rejects both Christianity and Islam but believes in karma and reincarnation on faith. And so on.

According to SEP, Fideism is:

“Fideism” is the name given to that school of thought – to which Tertullian himself is frequently said to have subscribed – which answers that faith is in some sense independent of, if not outright adversarial toward, reason. In contrast to the more rationalistic tradition of natural theology, with its arguments for the existence of God, fideism holds – or at any rate appears to hold (more on this caveat shortly) – that reason is unnecessary and inappropriate for the exercise and justification of religious belief. The term itself derives from fides, the Latin word for faith, and can be rendered literally as faith-ism. “Fideism” is thus to be understood not as a synonym for “religious belief,” but as denoting a particular philosophical account of faith’s appropriate jurisdiction vis-a-vis that of reason.

1. A Formal Definition

Alvin Plantinga has noted that fideism can be defined as an “exclusive or basic reliance upon faith alone, accompanied by a consequent disparagement of reason and utilized especially in the pursuit of philosophical or religious truth” (87). Correspondingly, Plantinga writes, a fideist is someone who “urges reliance on faith rather than reason, in matters philosophical and religious” and who “may go on to disparage and denigrate reason” (87). Notice, first, that what the fideist seeks, according to this account, is truth. Fideism claims that truths of a certain kind can be grasped only by foregoing rational inquiry and relying solely on faith. Insofar as fideism insists that knowledge of these truths is possible, it must be distinguished from various forms of skepticism with which it otherwise shares certain common features. Notice too that this definition is largely formal; the plausibility of fideism as a philosophical doctrine and the proper extension of the term will therefore depend on the content given to the terms “faith” and “reason.”

How can faith, or fideism, be considered a sound epistemology in the pursuit of truth if mutually exclusive beliefs can be equally "justified" through faith?


How does Alvin Plantinga define faith?

Plantinga's account of faith gives us a good clue I think as to why he would gravitate toward a picture according to which Christian beliefs are properly basic. Following Calvin, Plantinga defines faith (or faith of the type he wishes to discuss) as a "firm and certain knowledge" of "the central teachings of the gospel" (pp. 244-249). This certain knowledge is not arrived at by the workings of any of the faculties we were created with, but is the result of the work of the Holy Spirit (p. 245), who "causes us to believe these great truths of the gospel" (p. 245). Let "Plantinga faith" be faith as Plantinga describes it, leaving out the part about the beliefs in question constituting knowledge. (I want to identify "Plantinga faith" in a non-evaluative way in order to leave as an open question the status of beliefs that are the result of "Plantinga faith.") Plantinga faith then is a very strongly held belief in the great truths of the gospel, produced in accordance with God's plan by the Holy Spirit in the way Plantinga describes. How strongly held? Very strongly: It is a "firm and certain" belief (p. 244), one finds the beliefs so caused to be "compelling" (p. 250). Would the fortunate recipient of Plantinga faith have properly basic beliefs? Even after reading Plantinga's defense, I don't find this matter nearly as clear as Plantinga seems to find it, but it does seem plausible to me to suppose so.

Quoted from: https://www.baylor.edu/content/services/document.php/40620.pdf

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    "How can faith, or fideism, be considered a sound epistemology in the pursuit of truth if mutually exclusive beliefs can be equally "justified" through faith?" It cannot: faith is not "rational". Commented Sep 27 at 7:06
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    According to the last passage above "Plantinga's faith is a very strong held belief in the gospel resulting from the work of the Holy Spirit". How this is different from traditional Christian views? And from a "foundational" point of view it is simply circular: we believe in God because we believe in the gospel and we believe in the gospel because the Holy Spirit has done so". ???? Commented Sep 27 at 8:16
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    This question is similar to: What kind of epistemology would justify accepting religious claims that lie beyond the reach of scientific and historical verification?. If you believe it’s different, please edit the question, make it clear how it’s different and/or how the answers on that question are not helpful for your problem. Commented Sep 27 at 8:17
  • @MauroALLEGRANZA I'm not a Plantinga scholar, so I don't consider myself qualified to properly answer your second comment's questions. Regarding your third comment, none of the answers addresses fideism or faith (actually, the word faith never appears in the entire page). Instead, this question is laser focused on fideism/faith only.
    – user80226
    Commented Sep 27 at 9:00
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    The same way moral sentimentalism or intuitionism is defended by moral realists as epistemology of moral facts despite widespread cultural differences in moral standards. Our faith is imperfect and its interpretations partly corrupted and fallible, but with enough faith and piety the truth shines through, etc. Justification through faith is still subject to scrutiny and revision. Indeed, fideists often charge reason with moral deficiency with faith making up for it, "faith is against reason only in the sense that it runs into conflict with a concrete form of reason that is damaged" (Evans).
    – Conifold
    Commented Sep 27 at 10:02

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There seems like there might be some conflation going on here, of epistemic rhetoric with epistemology proper. Fideism, in practical terms, is similar to how John Rawls construes general egoism, as a "no-agreement point" in the dialectic. It is where an epistemic agent goes when they no longer intend to participate in the relevant dialectic, neither to defend their own beliefs nor to sway others to those beliefs. So it's not really much of an epistemological method or a productive argument strategy. (So even if the conflation is acceptable, the end result is still a moot point.)

Or, from within a given fideist's POV: "Why would I waste time debating people about being friends with God, when I'm friends with God? Isn't being God's friend more important than debating it with people who aren't His friends?" They're not looking at the question, then, from the standpoint of, "How to justify my answers to other people outwardly?" If other people claim other experiences or justifications of the truth of conflicting propositions, the fideist feels entitled to advert to either (A) "their experience/reasoning has been subtly distorted by sin" or (B) "they are deliberately sinfully witnessing/analyzing, i.e. lying about, this".

You might say that fideism is contrary to public reason or public justification. But now how many of us did ever say that knowledge is just publicly justified true belief? Per, say, Descartes, don't we sometimes allow for privately justified true beliefs? At least, as weak starting points of some kind, maybe? So there is some legitimate terminological space for fideism to be construed as a theory of knowledge, albeit this might not mean that it is internally legitimate (for example, if public reason is necessary for adequate moral judgment, then for one to disengage from public reasoning will be to attempt to disengage from proper moral judgment, to one's great moral detriment...).

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    I think this is missing (C) I cannot judge the internal experience of another, but I can judge my own.
    – kutschkem
    Commented Sep 27 at 8:29
  • Playing the (fallen or exalted) angel's advocate -- I don't see how fideism is contrary to public reason. You might as well say that empiricism is contrary to public reason. "Public" seems an empty idealization here.
    – mudskipper
    Commented Sep 27 at 14:43
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    @mudskipper I would probably be minded to distinguish between kinds of fideism, then to see if certain kinds are out of line with public reason. Or to distinguish between mysticism and fideism, assimilating the one to intuitive, the other to discursive, representation of religious contents (with both out of line, maybe, in their own way). Incidentally, I wouldn't object to claiming that naive or extreme forms of empiricism are also "dangerous" in this connection. Conspiracy theorists who appeal so much to personal anecdotes come to mind... Commented Sep 27 at 14:48
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    @mudskipper hmm, I do have a weird ideal public in mind, actually, I hadn't realized that... It's a raw quantitative one, the maximal public, all sentient life forms on Earth together (so maybe some nonhumans). But so by "public reason," I thought the first sense of it was, "To reason in public, or in a public way," which is why the non-argumentative mode of fideism seemed out of line with that? Or am I misreading things and fideists are more often willing to argue for the content of their beliefs? Commented Sep 27 at 14:54
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    I don't know -- I once asked a Southern Baptist coworker, "But how do you know the bible is God's word? Isn't that circular?" He gave me the single best answer I have ever heard (cannot remember his literal words, but it was sth like): "No, it's not circular. I directly see and hear this. I see God speaking there." So, that's not an argument presenting reasons or evidence -- it's an appeal to somehow seeing the world differently, to a form of quasi-perceptual recognition of "God". That's fideism "sec".
    – mudskipper
    Commented Sep 27 at 15:02
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To discuss your question one needs Plantinga’s definition of fideism and faith.

Plantinga’s definition of fideism is stated above. Notably his sentence

"Fideism claims that truths of a certain kind can be grasped only by foregoing rational inquiry and relying solely on faith."

Concerning Plantinga's description of faith see The Extended Aquinas/Calvin Model: :

"How does this model, with its excursion into theology, provide an answer to an epistemological question? How can it be a model for a way in which Christian belief has or could have justification, rationality, warrant? The answer is simplicity itself. These beliefs do not come to the Christian just by way of memory, perception, reason, testimony, the sensus divinitatis, or any other of the cognitive faculties with which we human beings were originally created; they come instead by way of the work of the Holy Spirit, who gets us to accept, causes us to believe, these great truths of the gospel. These beliefs don’t come just by way of the normal operation of our natural faculties; they are a supernatural gift. Still, the Christian who has received this gift of faith will of course be justified (in the basic sense of the term) in believing as he does; there will be nothing contrary to epistemic or other duty in so believing (indeed, once he has accepted the gift, it may not be within his power to withhold belief)"

Plantinga does not give an explicit definition of faith. But he equates “faith = believing these great truths of the gospel”. Hence Plantinga says:

  • Fideism claims that truths of a certain kind can be grasped only by foregoing rational inquiry and relying solely on faith
  • The Holy Spirit, who gets us to accept, causes us to believe, these great truths of the gospel.

Plantinga states: Certain religious truths rely solely on faith, and believing these truths is a gift of the Holy Spirit. Hence the original question reduces to:

Is the Holy Spirit a means to recognize truth?

Apparently, now we left the domain of philosophical epistemology and rational argumentation, and are completely immersed into a specific religion position.

Conclusion: These statements of Plantinga about fideism and faith do not explain how to handle contradicting positions from different religions. They do not support the view that fideism is a sound method of epistemology.

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You seem to be assuming a correspondence theory of truth. It is only under this theory of truth that I see the tension you're trying to present.

However, there are other relativist theories of truth, like certain pragmatic theories of truth, or constructivist theories of truth, which would not cause the same issues.

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    "However, there are other theories of truth, like the pragmatic theory of truth, or constructivist theories of truth, which would not cause the same issues." - Can you explain how?
    – user80226
    Commented Sep 27 at 4:57

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