On April 9, 2019, Dr. Craig enjoyed an exciting dialogue with Jeff Hester, the editor emeritus of Astronomy magazine. The topic was "Is Theistic Belief Rational in a Scientific Age?"
Arif Ahmed & Andrew Copson | 2011
October 20, 2011 • Andrew Copson & Arif Ahmed, William Lane Craig, Peter S Williams
The motion for this debate was "This House Believes that God is not a Delusion." The debate took place before a packed house at the Cambridge Union Society on October 20, 2011 as a part of William Lane Craig's Reasonable Faith Tour 2011.
Proposing the motion were William Lane Craig and Peter S.Williams. Opposing the motion were Arif Ahmed and Andrew Copson.
Jamal Badawi | 1997
January 1, 1997 • Jamal Badawi, William Lane Craig
Held Jan 1, 1997 at the University of Illinois
William Lane Craig debates Jamal Badawi, a leading Muslim apologist at the University of Illinois, showing the moral deficiency of the Islamic concept of God and the historical unreliability of the Qur'anic portrait of Jesus.
Erik Wielenberg | 2018
February 23, 2018 • William Lane Craig, Erik Wielenberg
Where does morality come from? Some claim God is the ultimate source of all moral values and duties. Others disagree. Dr. Erik Wielenberg (atheist) argues that morality doesn’t come from anywhere, it just is; morality has no, and needs no, explanation. Dr. William Lane Craig (Christian) argues that God is the best explanation for objective morality. Who is correct?
Jordan Peterson & Rebecca Goldstein | 2018
January 26, 2018 • Jordan Peterson, Rebecca Goldstein, William Lane Craig
On January 26th at the University of Toronto, 1500 people packed into Convocation Hall to watch a fascinating dialogue on the meaning of life featuring philosopher William Lane Craig, psychology professor Dr. Jordan Peterson, and philosopher and author Dr. Rebecca Newberger Goldstein (moderated by journalist Karen Stiller).
Daniel Came | 2017
March 23, 2017 • Daniel Came, William Lane Craig
In March 2017, Dr. Craig traveled the island of Ireland on a speaking tour that included various debates, lectures, and meetings. On March 23rd debated Daniel Came (Lecturer of Philosophy, University of Hull) from Trinity College Dublin. They presented their arguments at Trinity College Dublin on the topic, "Does God Exist?"
Michael Nugent | 2017
March 21, 2017 • Michael Nugent, William Lane Craig
In March 2017 Dr. Craig traveled the island of Ireland on a speaking tour that included various debates, lectures, and meetings. On March 21st he debated Michael Nugent of Atheist Ireland. They presented their arguments at University College Cork on the topic, "Does God Exist?"
Shabir Ally | 2002
Shabir Ally, William Lane Craig
In March 2002, Shabir Ally and William Lane Craig held a truly remarkable series of four debates at four Canadian universities on four questions distinguishing Christianity and Islam.
The fourth and final debate was held at the University of Western Ontario on the subject, "Who is the real Jesus? The Jesus of the Qur'an or the Jesus of the Bible?" Dr. Craig argues on the basis of standard criteria of authenticity that the historical Jesus had a divine self-understanding, while Ally maintains that personal claims to divinity are inauthentic.
Shabir Ally | 2002
Shabir Ally, William Lane Craig
In March 2002, Shabir Ally and William Lane Craig held a truly remarkable series of four debates at four Canadian universities on four questions distinguishing Christianity and Islam.
Their second debate was held at York University in Toronto, Canada on the subject, "What must I do to be saved?" Dr. Craig presents three objections to the Islamic view of salvation, and Ally responds by maintaining that God as described in the Qur’an is no less loving than the God of the Bible and that salvation is easy to obtain on the Islamic view.
Louise Antony | 2008
April 10, 2008 • Louise Antony, William Lane Craig
Held at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst, MA on April 10, 2008
Can we be good without God? Do we really need God for our morality? Is morality just a divine protection racket? Is there any rational basis for good if there is no God? William Lane Craig and Louise Antony address these questions and more in this debate on the foundational basis of morality.
Shabir Ally | 2002
Shabir Ally, William Lane Craig
In March 2002, Shabir Ally and William Lane Craig held a truly remarkable series of four debates at four Canadian universities on four questions distinguishing Christianity and Islam.
The first of these debates was held at the University of Toronto on the topic, "Did Jesus Rise From the Dead?" Ally counters Craig's argument for Jesus' resurrection by defending the apparent death theory with a novel Islamic twist: Jesus was taken down from the cross alive and placed in the tomb, where God assumed him into heaven before he could die.
Richard Carrier | 2009
March 18, 2009 • William Lane Craig, Richard Carrier
Held March 18, 2009 at Northwest Missouri State University
Shabir Ally | 2009
Shabir Ally, William Lane Craig
Hoax or History? Did Jesus Rise from the Dead?
Held at McGill University in Quebec, Canada - February 2009
Austin Dacey | 2004
January 1, 2004 • Austin Dacey, William Lane Craig
Purdue University | West Lafayette, Indiana
Three and a half thousand people gathered in the Elliott Hall of Music on the campus of Purdue University to witness this intellectual collision of two major competing worldviews in American culture: Atheism and Theism. This is the entire debate (including introductions and Q&A) between Dr. William Lane Craig and Dr. Austin Dacey.
Shabir Ally | 2002
Shabir Ally, William Lane Craig
In March 2002, Shabir Ally and William Lane Craig held a truly remarkable series of four debates at four Canadian universities on four questions distinguishing Christianity and Islam.
The third of these debates was held at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario on the topic, "The Concept of God in Islam and Christianity."
Dr. Craig argues for a Trinitarian concept of God and objects that the Islamic concept involves inadequate doctrines of divine goodness and omnipotence, while Ally argues that the primitive Christian concept of God was Unitarian and that the Islamic conception of God is not morally defective.