Islamic Theism and the Multiverse
Abstract
:1. Introduction
God it is who has created seven heavens, and similar number of earths. The commandments come down among them slowly, that you may know that God is able to do all things, and that God surrounds all things in knowledge.
2. Arguments from the Creator Attribute of God
2.1. The Argument from the Everlasting Creator Attribute of God
- God is everlastingly the creator.
- In order to possess the creator attribute, one must have created something.
- God created our universe (with its finite past).
- But God was the creator before He created our universe (from 1 and 3).
- Therefore, God created another universe before our universe (from 2 and 4).
- Therefore, theism suggests a multiverse6.
2.2. The Argument from the Best Creator
- God has every great-making attribute at its maximum.
- God is the creator.
- A being who creates all of the universes worth creating would be a better creator than one who creates a single universe.
- Therefore, God creates all of the universes worth creating, i.e., a multiverse.
3. Arguments from the Moral Attributes of God
3.1. The Argument from the Moral Perfection of God
- God is all good.
- God is omnipotent.
- All good beings would want to increase the value of reality.
- A universe worth creating would increase the value of reality.
- An omnipotent being can create any universe worth creating.
- Therefore, God would create any universe worth creating.
- Therefore, there is more than one possible universe.
- Therefore, God would create more than one universe.
- Therefore, God would create a multiverse.
3.2. The Argument from No Perfect Universe
- For any given universe, there is a better possible universe.
- If God were to create a single universe, his work would be morally surpassable.
- God is the greatest possible being.
- If God were the greatest possible being, then God’s work would not be morally surpassable.
- God’s work is not morally surpassable.
- Therefore, God did not create a single universe.
- God created at least one universe.
- Therefore, God created a multiverse.
3.3. Argument from Highest Justice
- God is perfectly just.
- Therefore, God creates all of the moral agents worth creating.
- Other human-like beings besides us would have been worth creating (with free will, intellect, moral goodness, etc.).
- It would be unjust to create us and not to create them (there is no moral reason to prefer us over them).
- God created us.
- Therefore, God created a multiverse.
3.4. The Argument from the Highest Love
- We cannot imagine a more loving being than God.
- In order to truly love, an object of love must exist at some time t or timelessly.
- A being B1 who loves more beings than a being B2 (with the same degree of love) is more loving than B2.
- If God were not to create all the beings worthy of love, we could imagine a more loving being than God.
- God creates all the beings worthy of love.
- Not all beings worth loving exist in our universe.
- God created a multiverse.
4. Arguments from the Lord Attribute of God
- God is everlastingly the Lord.
- A being can be a Lord only if there is a subject over whom he has authority.
- God created our universe, i.e., our universe has a finite past.
- God was the Lord before He created our universe.
- Thus, God must have created some other universe before our universe.
- Therefore, theism implies a multiverse.
- God is the greatest conceivable being.
- God is the greatest possible Lord.
- If being, B1, is in authority over more subjects than being, B2, then B1 is a greater Lord than B2.
- If God did not create all beings worth creating, we could imagine a greater being than God.
- Therefore, God created all beings worth creating.
- Not all beings worth creating exist in our universe.
- God created a multiverse.
5. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | For physicists defending this claim see: (Susskind 2005; Green 2011; Tegmark 2014). For philosophers defending the claim that fine-tuning can be explained via multiverse see: (Leslie 1989; Smart 1989; Parfit 1998, pp. 24–27; Bradley 2009, pp. 61–72). |
2 | For a defense of a multiverse theodicy see: (Turner 2003, pp. 1–17). |
3 | For a response based on the multiverse against the problem of no best world see: (Kraay 2010, pp. 355–68). |
4 | It is imperative to acknowledge that there exist several potential interpretations of the referenced verse (Quran 65:12) that do not necessarily pertain to the concept of a multiverse. The Directorate of Religious Affairs in Turkey, in their exegesis of the Quran, outlines various possibilities regarding the term "seven earths." These interpretations include the cosmological perspective prevalent during the Prophet’s era, a reference to the seven continents, an allusion to seven distinct planets, or the notion of seven layers of the earth. Additionally, it is recognized that the numeral "seven" may symbolize perfection or multiplicity rather than representing a literal quantity (Karaman et al. 2020, pp. 396–97). |
5 | For detailed presentation of these arguments see (Davidson 1987, pp. 49–85). |
6 | This argument implies a temporal multiverse, in which one universe exists before another universe, which exists before another universe, ad infinitum. |
7 | The everlasting model of God need not assume that God is in physical time. God may have his own temporal life, outside of physical time. So, when we say that our universe has a finite past in the third premise, we mean it has a finite past with respect to God’s (metaphysical) time. Since, we believe, finite physical time implies finite metaphysical time, we develop the argument in terms of physical time. |
8 | Although God as everlasting was not popular in medieval philosophy, it is among contemporary philosophers of religion. Contemporary philosophers find it difficult to understand how a timeless, eternal God could know A-theoretic propositions about the present and act in space–time. For a review of arguments for and against the everlasting model of God see: (Ganssle 2001). The everlasting view had adherents among Muslim theologians in medieval philosophy, most notably some Mutazilite theologians and Ibn Taymiyya. For detailed study of Ibn Taymiyya’s conception of God and creation see: (Hoover 2004). |
9 | It is also noteworthy that certain Islamic theists, such as Ibn Rushd and Ibn Sina, have advocated for models of the universe that posit its eternity. Their stance is influenced, in part, by Aristotelian science. However, as I have argued in previous works, contemporary scientific understanding appears to endorse the concept of a universe with a finite past. |
10 | For a defense of Theistic Activism see: (Morris and Menzel 1986, pp. 353–62). |
11 | For the bootstrapping objection to Theistic Activism see: (Gould 2011, pp. 255–74). |
12 | If we express the argument in terms of physical time, the eternal universe objection conflicts with orthodox cosmological models in modern cosmology. |
13 | I extend my gratitude to the anonymous referee for highlighting this potential objection. |
14 | The remark that universes are prior to the multiverse needs additional defense, since some models of multiverse seems to imply that there are meta-laws above the universes. For example, universes in the Quantum Mechanical multiverse are connected by and evolve according to the universal wavefunction. This can be used as an argument against the claim that universes are prior to the multiverse. |
15 | This accords with the Islamic understanding of God, as the best creator. “So blessed be Allah, the best of creators” (Quran 23:14). |
16 | Intuitively, it seems that not every creation is not worth creating, such as evilverses and universes in which there is just evil or evil suppresses goodness. |
17 | We should note the adjective better refers to the creative power of, rather than the axiological degree of the creation. |
18 | In Islamic theism, this is reflected in God’s name, Al-Barr (Quran 52:28). |
19 | We concede that omnipotence is restricted to the logically possible. Moreover, we concede, given libertarian freedom, that it is up to free creatures (not God) what they freely do in certain circumstances. So, following Plantinga, we concede that there are universes worth creating that God, though omnipotent, cannot create. |
20 | I thank the anonymous referee for providing this objection. |
21 | I extend my gratitude to the anonymous referee for raising this objection. |
22 | We should note that Asharite theology holds that what is good or bad is entirely dependent on God’s will. There is no inherent good or evil outside of what God decrees. This is what I mean by extreme Divine Voluntarism. Note that this is different than modified divine command theories such as the one championed by Robert Merrihew Adams (Adams 1987, pp. 97–122). Adams argues that moral truths exist and are grounded in the nature of God. Adams posits that God’s commands are rooted in His perfectly good and loving nature. This makes morality dependent on God’s nature rather than His will alone. Hence Adams’ modified divine command theory posits that there are objective moral values, this is not true for extreme divine voluntarism. Since modified divine command theory acknowledges the existence of objective moral values in God’s nature it is consistent with the claim that God has moral responsibility towards its creation. This responsibility is rooted in God’s inherently good and loving nature. Because God’s nature is the standard of goodness, His actions towards creation are guided by this moral character. |
23 | The moral community can be defined as a set of beings with moral characteristics which interact with at least one other being in the set. |
24 | This argument will not for some theist traditions who deny that death people will cease to exist till they are resurrected. There are different opinions about this issue in Islamic tradition. |
25 | Some Christians think that no sinful human being is worth loving. For them this argument should be (and can be) restated in terms of God’s undeserved love rather than human worth. Most Muslims will think that God only loves people who deserve to be loved. |
26 | Omnisubjectivity is a supposed attribute of God’s defended by Linda Zagzebski. She claims that God has an ability to know what it is like for each of God’s creature to be themselves; He shares our first-person perspectives with us. Again, if omnisubjectivity is a great making property, since it is obviously dependent on the creatures themselves, one can again argue that combined with perfect being theology it leads to a multiverse. |
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Doko, E. Islamic Theism and the Multiverse. Religions 2024, 15, 861. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070861
Doko E. Islamic Theism and the Multiverse. Religions. 2024; 15(7):861. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070861
Chicago/Turabian StyleDoko, Enis. 2024. "Islamic Theism and the Multiverse" Religions 15, no. 7: 861. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070861
APA StyleDoko, E. (2024). Islamic Theism and the Multiverse. Religions, 15(7), 861. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070861