
Kurduvādi Last month, a packed audience at London’s Royal Institution watched William Lane Craig, the Christian philosopher and apologist, square off against Alex O’Connor, the Cambridge-educated YouTuber who has made a career dismantling the God argument. They were good. They were sharp. And they both missed the same thing.
The debate, like nearly all debates between atheists and theists, began with a shared assumption so old and so familiar that nobody bothered to question it. That assumption: there is something rather than nothing, and that demands an explanation. It is the oldest move in the game. It is also the wrong move.
The theist says God explains it. The atheist says the laws of physics explain it. Both plant their flags on the same hill. Both argue over who put the something there. But here is what neither side paused to ask: what, exactly, is nothing?
Go ahead. Try to define it. The moment you do, you have made it something. You have given it properties. You have described it, which means it occupies a conceptual space, which means it exists in at least one dimension of reality. Philosophers call this the paradox of nothingness. Physicists have been circling it for decades.
The moment you talk about nothing, you have already lost nothing.
Consider the theist’s own position. God, in every major theological tradition, is eternal. He exists outside of time. He has always been and always will be. That means even the theist’s universe carries something eternal within it from the very start. Before the creation, there was God. Before the void, there was God. The theist’s argument, at its foundation, is that something eternal gave rise to something temporal. Which is an argument that something has always existed. Which is an argument that nothing is a term without a referent.
The theist defeats the premise before the atheist gets a word in. They just fail to see it.
Some will say nothing means the absence of everything. But absence is itself a condition. It has structure. It implies a somewhere from which things are absent. You need a container for that absence, and a container is something. The argument eats itself before it gets started. It has been eating itself for centuries. We just keep feeding it.
Quantum mechanics bears it out. The best current models of the Big Bang describe a fissure in a quantum field that already existed, a pre-geometric constant from which space and time as we measure them were born.
Our universe emerged from something our instruments have yet to fully describe. Those same instruments tell us that even the emptiest measurable space seethes with virtual particles, flickering in and out of existence. Empty space is something. It always was.
This is what Evidentialism has always argued: that mathematical order, the constancy of physical law, the fact that the universe behaves according to principles we can discover and verify, these are the signature of a reality that exists by necessity. Something exists because nothing is a logical impossibility. The scientific method, applied with rigor and humility, leads to the same place theology does, just by a more honest road.
Which raises a question neither Craig nor O’Connor put on the table: what if nothing is an impossible state of existence? What if something must exist because nothing has zero mechanism by which to exist at all? What if the universe is a logical necessity rather than a divine gift?
The argument from nothing has always been the argument from something. It assumes a ledger with a zero on it. But zero may be a number the universe lacks the means to write.
Atheists have long ceded this ground. By accepting the premise that something requires justification against a backdrop of possible nothingness, they have agreed to play on the theist’s field. The theist then walks onto that field with God in tow, and the argument is half won before it begins.
Yield that ground and the debate is over before it starts. Hold it, and a different question emerges: why is there this something rather than another something. That question requires an honest reckoning with what nothing actually means.
Which is, it turns out, nothing at all.

