Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Existence of God :: Ontological arguments
The dilemma of the existence of God has troubled mankind for thousands of years. Many philosophers have put forth their theories in order to prove the existence of God. Most of these arguments can be termed as ontological. These arguments differ from other arguments for the existence of God since they are not based on empirical data such as the existence or nature of the universe, but are rather grounded in pure logic. First we will consider the arguments presented by Anselm. He believed that God is ââ¬Ëthat than which nothing greater can be conceivedââ¬â¢; if one understand this, then God exists in his mind; but it is greater to exist in reality as well as in the mind than to exist only in the mind; therefore, something that exists only in the mind is not ââ¬Ëthat than which nothing greater can be conceivedââ¬â¢; therefore, God exists in reality as well. Anselm also puts this another way: we can conceive of a being that cannot be conceived not to exist; such a being is greater than one that can be conceived not to exist; therefore the greatest conceivable being cannot be conceived not to exist; therefore, the greatest conceivable being exists. This argument does seem to conclude that something resembling the traditional theistic God exists ââ¬â unlike the cosmological and teleological arguments, which seem restricted to a creator and a designer respectively. This argument was immediately criticized by Gaunilo, who argued that parallel reasoning could be applied to prove the existence of a perfect island. This is a reduction of Anselmââ¬â¢s position: it shows it to have absurd consequences. However, it is not clear that there is a coherent concept of the perfect island to start with: how many palm trees is the perfect number? Anselmââ¬â¢s own reply seems to distinguish the perfect island ââ¬â which is a perfect example of one kind of thing ââ¬â from the perfect being ââ¬â which is a perfect example of a thing, with no restriction to kind. It is no virtue, excellence, perfection of an island qua island that it exists, but it is a virtue, excellence, perfection of a being that it exists, so the argument works only for the concept of a perfect being. The bigger criticism is the one Kant levied at Descartesââ¬â¢s version of the argument, but applies equally to Anselmââ¬â¢s. It is that existence is not a great-making quality of a being, because it is not a quality of a being at all; in Kantââ¬â¢s terms ââ¬Ëexistence is not a real predicateââ¬â¢.
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