“Suppose we think of a man made of water in an infinitely extended
and bottomless ocean of water. Desiring to get out of water, he makes a
ladder of water. He sets this ladder upon the water and against the
water and then attempts to climb out of the water. So hopeless and
senseless a picture must be drawn of the natural man’s methodology based
as it is upon the assumption that time or chance is ultimate. On his
assumption his own rationality is a product of chance. On his assumption
even the laws of logic which he employs are products of chance. The
rationality and purpose that he may be searching for are still bound
to be products of chance.”
—Cornelius Van Til, The Defense of the Faith (P&R,
1972), p. 102. (The link is to the newer edition edited by K. Scott
Oliphint, but the page number is from the original edition.)
For a similar argument from C.S. Lewis, see Victor Reppert’s C.S. Lewis’s Dangerous Idea: In Defense of the Argument from Reason (IVP, 2003).
Justin Taylor
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