Abstract
Peter Millican and Branden Thornhill-Miller have recently argued that
contradictions between different religious belief systems, in conjunction with the
host of defeaters based on empirical research concerning alleged sources of evidence
for ‘perceived supernatural agency’, render all ‘first-order’, that is actual, religious
traditions positively irrational, and a source of discord on a global scale. However,
since the authors recognise that the ‘secularisation thesis’ appears to be incorrect,
and that empirical research provides evidence that religious belief also has beneficial
individual and social effects, they put forward a hypothesis of a ‘second-order
religious belief ’, with Universalist overtones and thus free of intergroup conflict, and
free of irrationality, since supported (solely) by the Fine-Tuning Argument. While
granting most of their arguments based on empirical research and embracing the
new paradigm of the atheism/religion debate implicit in their paper, I contend that
Millican’s and Thornhill-Miller’s proposal is unlikely to appeal to religious believers,
because it misconstrues the nature and grounds of religious belief. I suggest that their
hypothesis may be refined by taking into account a view of axiologically grounded
religious belief that I refer to as ‘agatheism’, since it identifies God or the Ultimate
Reality with the ultimate good (to agathon).