Hashtag Contingency
Dr. M A Mujeeb | mujeeb_speaks @ YT/Insta/FB
Hashtag Contingency
The
recent two-hour academic debate between writer, poet and lyricist Javed Akhtar
and Islamic scholar Mufti Shamail Nadwi on the topic, “Does God Exist?” has
taken the internet by storm. Social media is flooded with short clips,
reactions, and heated comment-section disputes as people passionately take
sides. Amid all this noise, one word from the discussion has especially caught
public attention: contingency.
At
one point, Javed Akhtar openly admitted that he did not understand what this
term meant and many viewers felt the same. This blog aims to unpack the ideas
of contingency and infinite regress in simple language, using this
unique debate, moderated by journalist Saurabh Dwivedi of India Today Hindi
and Lallantop, as a reference point.
What
Is Contingency?
A
contingent thing is something that doesn't have to exist, it could just as
easily not be here. Think of yourself: you depend on your parents, food, air,
and a stable planet to exist right now. If any link in that chain breaks, you
vanish. Everyday objects like your phone, a tree, or even the sun is contingent
because their existence relies on prior causes or conditions. Philosophers like
Thomas Aquinas argued that the entire universe seems contingent, nothing in it
explains its own being.
Contingent
beings borrow their existence moment by moment and without any constant support, they
wouldn't persist. This leads to the big question: if everything we see is
contingent, what keeps the whole show running? Just piling up more contingent
things doesn't solve it.
Hence, Mufti
Shamail Nadwi argued that because everything contingent
requires a cause, there must ultimately be a necessary being
(something that exists by its own nature, not dependent on anything else). In
Islamic and Christian philosophy, this “necessary being” is identified as God.
Infinite
Regress in the Spotlight
Infinite
regress happens when each explanation demands another one, stretching backward
forever without a starting point. Imagine dominos falling: why did the last one
tip? Because the one before hit it. Why that one? The previous pushed it. If
this chain goes on infinitely, you've explained each fall but not why any are
falling at all, no first push means no ultimate reason.
In
philosophy, this regress can be "vicious" if it makes a theory
impossible or unexplanatory. A chain of fathers explains your existence (dad
from granddad, and so on), but an endless chain of contingent causes leaves the
core mystery untouched: why is there a chain instead of nothing?
Akhtar
didn't directly counter the regress but shifted to burden of proof, comparing
God to an undetectable teapot citing philosopher Bertrand Russell’s analogy, claimants
must prove, not skeptics disprove. He implied endless chains or brute facts
might suffice, urging focus on observable suffering over metaphysics.
Why
this debate matters?
India
often sees polarized debates on religion, but this event showed that an atheist
and a religious scholar can share a stage without hostility. Saurabh
Dwivedi ensured balance, allowing both sides to present their arguments fully,
which reinforced the value of civil disagreement in a diverse society. By
hosting the debate at the Constitution Club in New Delhi, the event
symbolically tied the discussion to India’s democratic and secular ethos. It
highlighted that questioning faith is not taboo in India’s public sphere,
aligning with constitutional values of free speech and thought. Akhtar’s rebuttal
and Nadwi’s technical depth created a bridge between academic philosophy and
popular culture. Millions of views online show that Indians are eager to engage
with complex ideas when presented in accessible formats.

JazakAllahu Khairan kaseera for putting your valuable point on this topic.
ReplyDeleteWa iyyakum
DeleteGood explanation.
ReplyDeleteQur'an says "On the day of resurrection, disbelievers will be confronted with their denial of the truth and their past deeds, and their excuses will not be accepted"
ReplyDeleteVery well explained on a topic that needed simplified explanation.. well drafted keep up the good work 👍
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteAn insightful explanation. 👍🏻🤝
ReplyDeleteThank you Dr. Mujeeb for throwing light on the word
ReplyDelete"Contingent", it was much needed to elaborate this term to public for the better interpretation of the debate. Glad you took this to write and spread the eagerness to know "Does God Exists".