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Ontological argument

An ontological argument is a philosophical argument, made from an ontological basis, that is advanced in support of the existence of God. Such arguments tend to refer to the state of being or existing. More specifically, ontological arguments are commonly conceived a priori in regard to the organization of the universe, whereby, if such organizational structure is true, God must exist.

The first ontological argument in Western Christian tradition[i] was proposed by Saint Anselm of Canterbury in his 1078 work, Proslogion (Latin: Proslogium, lit.'Discourse on the Existence of God'), in which he defines God as "a being than which no greater can be conceived," and argues that such a being must exist in the mind, even in that of the person who denies the existence of God.[1] From this, he suggests that if the greatest possible being exists in the mind, it must also exist in reality, because if it existed only in the mind, then an even greater being must be possible—one who exists both in mind and in reality. Therefore, this greatest possible being must exist in reality. Similarly, in the East, Avicenna's Proof of the Truthful argued, albeit for very different reasons, that there must be a "necessary existent".[2]

Seventeenth-century French philosopher René Descartes employed a similar argument to Anselm's. Descartes published several variations of his argument, each of which center on the idea that God's existence is immediately inferable from a "clear and distinct" idea of a supremely perfect being. In the early 18th century, Gottfried Leibniz augmented Descartes' ideas in an attempt to prove that a "supremely perfect" being is a coherent concept. A more recent ontological argument came from Kurt Gödel, who proposed a formal argument for God's existence. Norman Malcolm also revived the ontological argument in 1960 when he located a second, stronger ontological argument in Anselm's work; Alvin Plantinga challenged this argument and proposed an alternative, based on modal logic. Attempts have also been made to validate Anselm's proof using an automated theorem prover. Other arguments have been categorised as ontological, including those made by Islamic philosophers Mulla Sadra and Allama Tabatabai.

Just as the ontological argument has been popular, a number of criticisms and objections have also been mounted. Its first critic was Gaunilo of Marmoutiers, a contemporary of Anselm's. Gaunilo, suggesting that the ontological argument could be used to prove the existence of anything, uses the analogy of a perfect island. Such would be the first of many parodies, all of which attempted to show the absurd consequences of the ontological argument. Later, Thomas Aquinas rejected the argument on the basis that humans cannot know God's nature. David Hume also offered an empirical objection, criticising its lack of evidential reasoning and rejecting the idea that anything can exist necessarily. Immanuel Kant's critique was based on what he saw as the false premise that existence is a predicate, arguing that "existing" adds nothing (including perfection) to the essence of a being. Thus, a "supremely perfect" being can be conceived not to exist. Finally, philosophers such as C. D. Broad dismissed the coherence of a maximally great being, proposing that some attributes of greatness are incompatible with others, rendering "maximally great being" incoherent.

Contemporary defenders of the ontological argument include Alvin Plantinga, Yujin Nagasawa, and Robert Maydole.

Classification edit

The traditional definition of an ontological argument was given by Immanuel Kant.[3] He contrasted the ontological argument (literally any argument "concerned with being")[4] with the cosmological and physio-theoretical arguments.[5] According to the Kantian view, ontological arguments are those founded through a priori reasoning.[3]

Graham Oppy, who elsewhere expressed that he "see[s] no urgent reason" to depart from the traditional definition,[3] defined ontological arguments as those which begin with "nothing but analytic, a priori and necessary premises" and conclude that God exists. Oppy admits, however, that not all of the "traditional characteristics" of an ontological argument (i.e. analyticity, necessity, and a priority) are found in all ontological arguments[1] and, in his 2007 work Ontological Arguments and Belief in God, suggested that a better definition of an ontological argument would employ only considerations "entirely internal to the theistic worldview."[3]

Oppy subclassified ontological arguments, based on the qualities of their premises, using the following qualities:[1][3]

  • definitional: arguments that invoke definitions.
  • conceptual (or hyperintensional): arguments that invoke "the possession of certain kinds of ideas or concepts."
  • modal: arguments that consider possibilities.
  • meinongian: arguments that assert "a distinction between different categories of existence."
  • experiential: arguments that employ the idea of God existing solely to those who have had experience of him.
  • mereological: arguments that "draw on…the theory of the whole-part relation."[6]
  • higher-order: arguments that observe "that any collection of properties, that (a) does not include all properties and (b) is closed under entailment, is possibly jointly instantiated."
  • Hegelian: the arguments of Hegel.

William Lane Craig criticised Oppy's study as too vague for useful classification. Craig argues that an argument can be classified as ontological if it attempts to deduce the existence of God, along with other necessary truths, from his definition. He suggests that proponents of ontological arguments would claim that, if one fully understood the concept of God, one must accept his existence.[7]

William L. Rowe defines ontological arguments as those which start from the definition of God and, using only a priori principles, conclude with God's existence.[8]

Development edit

Although a version of the ontological argument appears explicitly in the writings of the ancient Greek philosopher Xenophanes and variations appear in writings by Parmenides, Plato, and the Neoplatonists,[9] the mainstream view is that the ontological argument was first clearly stated and developed by Anselm of Canterbury.[1][10][11] Some scholars argue that Islamic philosopher Avicenna (Ibn Sina) developed a special kind of ontological argument before Anselm,[12][13] while others have doubted this position.[14][15][16]

Daniel Dombrowski marked three major stages in the development of the argument:[17]

  1. Anselm's initial explicit formulation,
  2. the 18th-century criticisms of Kant and Hume, and
  3. the identification of a second ontological argument in Anselm's Proslogion by 20th-century philosophers.

Anselm edit

 
Anselm of Canterbury was the first to attempt an ontological argument for God's existence.

Theologian and philosopher Anselm of Canterbury (1033–1109) proposed an ontological argument in the 2nd and 3rd chapters of his Proslogion.[18] Anselm's argument was not presented in order to prove God's existence; rather, Proslogion was a work of meditation in which he documented how the idea of God became self-evident to him.[19]

In Chapter 2 of the Proslogion, Anselm defines God as a "being than which no greater can be conceived."[1] While Anselm has often been credited as the first to understand God as the greatest possible being, this perception was actually widely described among ancient Greek philosophers and early Christian writers.[20][21] He suggests that even "the fool" can understand this concept, and this understanding itself means that the being must exist in the mind. The concept must exist either only in our mind, or in both our mind and in reality. If such a being exists only in our mind, then a greater being—that which exists in the mind and in reality—can be conceived (this argument is generally regarded as a reductio ad absurdum because the view of the fool is proven to be inconsistent). Therefore, if we can conceive of a being than which nothing greater can be conceived, it must exist in reality. Thus, a being than which nothing greater could be conceived, which Anselm defined as God, must exist in reality.[22]

Anselm's argument in Chapter 2 can be summarized as follows:[23]

  1. It is a conceptual truth (or, so to speak, true by definition) that God is a being than which none greater can be imagined (that is, the greatest possible being that can be imagined).
  2. God exists as an idea in the mind.
  3. A being that exists as an idea in the mind and in reality is, other things being equal, greater than a being that exists only as an idea in the mind.
  4. Thus, if God exists only as an idea in the mind, then we can imagine something that is greater than God (that is, a greatest possible being that does exist).
  5. But we cannot imagine something that is greater than God (for it is a contradiction to suppose that we can imagine a being greater than the greatest possible being that can be imagined.)
  6. Therefore, God exists.

In Chapter 3, Anselm presents a further argument in the same vein:[23]

  1. By definition, God is a being than which none greater can be imagined.
  2. A being that necessarily exists in reality is greater than a being that does not necessarily exist.
  3. Thus, by definition, if God exists as an idea in the mind but does not necessarily exist in reality, then we can imagine something that is greater than God.
  4. But we cannot imagine something that is greater than God.
  5. Thus, if God exists in the mind as an idea, then God necessarily exists in reality.
  6. God exists in the mind as an idea.
  7. Therefore, God necessarily exists in reality.

This contains the notion of a being that cannot be conceived not to exist. He argued that if something can be conceived not to exist, then something greater can be conceived. Consequently, a thing than which nothing greater can be conceived cannot be conceived not to exist and so it must exist. This can be read as a restatement of the argument in Chapter 2, although Norman Malcolm believes it to be a different, stronger argument.[24]

René Descartes edit

 
French thinker René Descartes proposed several arguments that could be termed ontological.

René Descartes (1596–1650) proposed a number of ontological arguments that differ from Anselm's formulation. Generally speaking, they are less formal arguments than they are natural intuition.

In Meditation, Book V, Descartes wrote:[25]

But, if the mere fact that I can produce from my thought the idea of something entails that everything that I clearly and distinctly perceive to belong to that thing really does belong to it, is not this a possible basis for another argument to prove the existence of God? Certainly, the idea of God, or a supremely perfect being, is one that I find within me just as surely as the idea of any shape or number. And my understanding that it belongs to his nature that he always exists is no less clear and distinct than is the case when I prove of any shape or number that some property belongs to its nature.

Descartes argues that God's existence can be deduced from his nature, just as geometric ideas can be deduced from the nature of shapes—he used the deduction of the sizes of angles in a triangle as an example. He suggested that the concept of God is that of a supremely perfect being, holding all perfections. He seems to have assumed that existence is a predicate of a perfection. Thus, if the notion of God did not include existence, it would not be supremely perfect, as it would be lacking a perfection. Consequently, the notion of a supremely perfect God who does not exist, Descartes argues, is unintelligible. Therefore, according to his nature, God must exist.[26]

Baruch Spinoza edit

In Spinoza's Short Treatise on God, Man, and His Well-Being, he wrote a section titled "Treating of God and What Pertains to Him", in which he discusses God's existence and what God is. He starts off by saying: "whether there is a God, this, we say, can be proved".[27] His proof for God follows a similar structure as Descartes' ontological argument. Descartes attempts to prove God's existence by arguing that there "must be some one thing that is supremely good, through which all good things have their goodness".[28] Spinoza's argument differs in that he does not move straight from the conceivability of the greatest being to the existence of God, but rather uses a deductive argument from the idea of God. Spinoza says that man's ideas do not come from himself, but from some sort of external cause. Thus the things whose characteristics a man knows must have come from some prior source. So, if man has the idea of God, then God must exist before this thought, because man cannot create an idea of his own imagination.[27]

Gottfried Leibniz edit

 
German philosopher Gottfried Leibniz attempted to prove the coherence of a "supremely perfect being".

Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz saw a problem with Descartes' ontological argument: that Descartes had not asserted the coherence of a "supremely perfect" being. He proposed that, unless the coherence of a supremely perfect being could be demonstrated, the ontological argument fails. Leibniz saw perfection as impossible to analyse; therefore, it would be impossible to demonstrate that all perfections are incompatible. He reasoned that all perfections can exist together in a single entity, and that Descartes' argument is still valid.[29]

Mulla Sadra edit

Mulla Sadra (c. 1571/2–1640) was an Iranian Shia Islamic philosopher who was influenced by earlier Muslim philosophers such as Avicenna and Suhrawardi, as well as the Sufi metaphysician Ibn 'Arabi. Sadra discussed Avicenna's arguments for the existence of God, claiming that they were not a priori. He rejected the argument on the basis that existence precedes essence, or that the existence of human beings is more fundamental than their essence.[30]

Sadra put forward a new argument, known as Seddiqin Argument or Argument of the Righteous. The argument attempts to prove the existence of God through the reality of existence, and to conclude with God's pre-eternal necessity. In this argument, a thing is demonstrated through itself, and a path is identical with the goal. In other arguments, the truth is attained from an external source, such as from the possible to the necessary, from the originated to the eternal origin, or from motion to the unmoved mover. In the argument of the righteous, there is no middle term other than the truth.[31] His version of the ontological argument can be summarized as follows:[30]

  1. There is existence
  2. Existence is a perfection above which no perfection may be conceived
  3. God is perfection and perfection in existence
  4. Existence is a singular and simple reality; there is no metaphysical pluralism
  5. That singular reality is graded in intensity in a scale of perfection (that is, a denial of a pure monism).
  6. That scale must have a limit point, a point of greatest intensity and of greatest existence.
  7. Hence God exists.

Mulla Sadra describes this argument in his main work al-asfar al-arba‘a [four journeys] as follows:

Existence is a single, objective and simple reality, and there is no difference between its parts, unless in terms of perfection and imperfection, strength, and weakness... And the culmination of its perfection, where there is nothing more perfect, is its independence from any other thing. Nothing more perfect should be conceivable, as every imperfect thing belongs to another thing and needs this other to become perfect. And, as it has already been explicated, perfection is prior to imperfection, actuality to potency, and existence to non-existence. Also, it has been explained that the perfection of a thing is the thing itself, and not a thing in addition to it. Thus, either existence is independent of others or it is in need of others. The former is the Necessary, which is pure existence. Nothing is more perfect than Him. And in Him there is no room for non-existence or imperfection. The latter is other than Him, and is regarded as His acts and effects, and for other than Him there is no subsistence, unless through Him. For there is no imperfection in the reality of existence, and imperfection is added to existence only because of the quality of being caused, as it is impossible for an effect to be identical with its cause in terms of existence.[32]

G. W. F. Hegel edit

In response to Kant's rejection of traditional speculative philosophy in his First Critique, and to Kant's rejection of the Ontological Argument, G. W. F. Hegel proposed throughout his lifetime works that Immanuel Kant was mistaken. Hegel took aim at Kant's famous $100 argument. Kant had said that "it is one thing to have $100 in my mind, and quite a different thing to have $100 in my pocket." According to Kant, we can imagine a God, but that doesn't prove that God exists.

Hegel argued that Kant's formulation was inaccurate. Hegel referred to Kant's error in all of his major works from 1807 to 1831. For Hegel, "The True is the Whole" (PhG, para. 20). For Hegel, the True is the Geist which is to say, Spirit, which is to say, God. Thus God is the Whole of the Cosmos, both unseen as well as seen. This error of Kant, therefore, was his comparison of a finite (contingent) entity such as $100, with Infinite (necessary) Being, i.e. the Whole.

When regarded as the Whole of Being, unseen as well as seen, and not simply "one being among many," then the Ontological Argument flourishes, and its logical necessity becomes obvious, according to Hegel.

The final book contract that Hegel signed in the year that he died, 1831, was for a book entitled, Lectures on the Proofs of the Existence of God. Hegel died before finishing the book. It was to have three sections: (1) The Cosmological Argument; (2) The Teleological Argument; and (3) the Ontological Argument. Hegel died before beginning sections 2 and 3. His work is published today as incomplete, with only part of his Cosmological Argument intact.

To peruse Hegel's ideas on the Ontological Argument, scholars have had to piece together his arguments from various paragraphs from his other works. Certain scholars have suggested that all of Hegel's philosophy composes an ontological argument.[33][34]

Kurt Gödel edit

Mathematician Kurt Gödel provided a formal argument for God's existence. The argument was constructed by Gödel but not published until long after his death. He provided an argument based on modal logic; he uses the conception of properties, ultimately concluding with God's existence.[35]

Definition 1: x is God-like if and only if x has as essential properties those and only those properties which are positive

Definition 2: A is an essence of x if and only if for every property B, x has B necessarily if and only if A entails B

Definition 3: x necessarily exists if and only if every essence of x is necessarily exemplified

Axiom 1: If a property is positive, then its negation is not positive

Axiom 2: Any property entailed by—i.e., strictly implied by—a positive property is positive

Axiom 3: The property of being God-like is positive

Axiom 4: If a property is positive, then it is necessarily positive

Axiom 5: Necessary existence is positive

Axiom 6: For any property P, if P is positive, then being necessarily P is positive

Theorem 1: If a property is positive, then it is consistent, i.e., possibly exemplified

Corollary 1: The property of being God-like is consistent

Theorem 2: If something is God-like, then the property of being God-like is an essence of that thing

Theorem 3: Necessarily, the property of being God-like is exemplified

Gödel defined being "god-like" as having every positive property. He left the term "positive" undefined. Gödel proposed that it is understood in an aesthetic and moral sense, or alternatively as the opposite of privation (the absence of necessary qualities in the universe). He warned against interpreting "positive" as being morally or aesthetically "good" (the greatest advantage and least disadvantage), as this includes negative characteristics. Instead, he suggested that "positive" should be interpreted as being perfect, or "purely good", without negative characteristics.[36]

Gödel's listed theorems follow from the axioms, so most criticisms of the theory focus on those axioms or the assumptions made. For instance, axiom 5 does not explain why necessary existence is positive instead of possible existence, an axiom which the whole argument follows from. Or, for Axiom 1, to use another example, the negation of a positive property both includes the lack of any properties and the opposite property, and only the lack of any properties is a privation of a property, not the opposite property (for instance, the lack of happiness can symbolize either sadness or having no emotion, but only lacking emotion could be seen as a privation, or negative property). Either of these axioms being seen as not mapping to reality would cause the whole argument to fail. Oppy argued that Gödel gives no definition of "positive properties". He suggested that if these positive properties form a set, there is no reason to believe that any such set exists which is theologically interesting, or that there is only one set of positive properties which is theologically interesting.[35]

Modal versions of the ontological argument edit

Modal logic deals with the logic of possibility as well as necessity. Paul Oppenheimer and Edward N. Zalta note that, for Anselm's Proslogion chapter 2, "Many recent authors have interpreted this argument as a modal one." In the phrase 'that than which none greater can be conceived', the word 'can' could be construed as referring to a possibility. Nevertheless, the authors write that "the logic of the ontological argument itself doesn't include inferences based on this modality."[37] However, there have been newer, avowedly modal logic versions of the ontological argument, and on the application of this type of logic to the argument, James Franklin Harris writes:

[D]ifferent versions of the ontological argument, the so-called "modal" versions of the argument, which arguably avoid the part of Anselm's argument that "treats existence as a predicate," began to emerge. The [modal logic version] of these forms of defense of the ontological argument has been the most significant development.[38]

Hartshorne and Malcolm edit

Charles Hartshorne and Norman Malcolm are primarily responsible for introducing modal versions of the argument into the contemporary debate. Both claimed that Anselm had two versions of the ontological argument, the second of which was a modal logic version. According to James Harris, this version is represented by Malcolm thus:

If it [that than which nothing greater can be conceived] can be conceived at all it must exist. For no one who denies or doubts the existence of a being a greater than which is inconceivable, denies or doubts that if it did exist its nonexistence, either in reality or in the understanding, would be impossible. For otherwise it would not be a being a greater than which cannot be conceived. But as to whatever can be conceived but does not exist: if it were to exist its nonexistence either in reality or in the understanding would be possible. Therefore, if a being a greater than which cannot be conceived, can even be conceived, it must exist.

Hartshorne says that, for Anselm, "necessary existence is a superior manner of existence to ordinary, contingent existence and that ordinary, contingent existence is a defect." For Hartshorne, both Hume and Kant focused only upon whether what exists is greater than what does not exist. However, "Anselm's point is that what exists and cannot not exist is greater than that which exists and can not exist." This avoids the question of whether or not existence is a predicate.[38]

Referring to the two ontological arguments proposed by Anselm in Chapters 2 and 3 of his Proslogion, Malcolm supported Kant's criticism of Anselm's argument in Chapter 2: that existence cannot be a perfection of something. However, he identified what he sees as the second ontological argument in Chapter 3 which is not susceptible to such criticism.[39]

In Anselm's second argument, Malcolm identified two key points: first, that a being whose non-existence is logically impossible is greater than a being whose non-existence is logically possible, and second, that God is a being "than which a greater cannot be conceived". Malcolm supported that definition of God and suggested that it makes the proposition of God's existence a logically necessarily true statement (in the same way that "a square has four sides" is logically necessarily true).[39] Thus, while rejecting the idea of existence itself being a perfection, Malcolm argued that necessary existence is a perfection. This, he argued, proved the existence of an unsurpassably great necessary being.

Jordan Sobel writes that Malcolm is incorrect in assuming that the argument he is expounding is to be found entirely in Proslogion chapter 3. "Anselm intended in Proslogion III not an independent argument for the existence of God, but a continuation of the argument of Proslogion II."[40]

Alvin Plantinga edit

 
Alvin Plantinga criticized Malcolm's and Hartshorne's ontological arguments and proposed a variation of his own.

Christian Analytic philosopher Alvin Plantinga[41] criticized Malcolm's and Hartshorne's arguments, and offered an alternative.

Plantinga developed his argument in the books titled The nature of necessity (1974; ch. 10) and God, Freedom and Evil (1975; part 2 c).[42] He argued that, if Malcolm does prove the necessary existence of the greatest possible being, it follows that there is a being which exists in all worlds whose greatness in some worlds is not surpassed. It does not, he argued, demonstrate that such a being has unsurpassed greatness in this actual world.[43]

In an attempt to resolve this problem, Plantinga differentiated between "greatness" and "excellence". A being's excellence in a particular world depends only on its properties in that world; a being's greatness depends on its properties in all worlds. Therefore, the greatest possible being must have maximal excellence in every possible world. Plantinga then restated Malcolm's argument, using the concept of "maximal greatness". He argued that it is possible for a being with maximal greatness to exist, so a being with maximal greatness exists in a possible world. If this is the case, then a being with maximal greatness exists in every world, and therefore in this world.[43]

The conclusion relies on a form of modal axiom 5 of S5, which states that if something is possibly true, then its possibility is necessary (it is possibly true in all worlds; in symbols:  ). Plantinga's version of S5 suggests that "To say that p is possibly necessarily true is to say that, with regard to one possible world, it is true at all worlds; but in that case it is true at all worlds, and so it is simply necessary."[44] In other words, to say that p is necessarily possible means that p is true in at least one possible world W (if it is an actual world; Plantinga also used Axioms B of S5:  ) and thus it is true in all worlds because its omnipotence, omniscience, and moral perfection are its essence.

In the 1975 version of the argument, Plantinga clarified that[42] "it follows that if W had been actual, it would have been impossible that there be no such being. That is, if W had been actual,

(33) There is no omnipotent, omniscient, and morally perfect being,

would have been an impossible proposition. But if a proposition is impossible in at least one possible world, then it is impossible in every possible world; what is impossible does not vary from world to world. Accordingly (33) is impossible in the actual world, i.e., impossible simpliciter. But if it is impossible that there be no such being, then there actually exists a being that is omnipotent, omniscient, and morally perfect; this being, furthermore, has these qualities essentially and exists in every possible world."

A version of his argument may be formulated as follows:[29]

  1. A being has maximal excellence in a given possible world W if and only if it is omnipotent, omniscient and wholly good in W; and
  2. A being has maximal greatness if it has maximal excellence in every possible world.
  3. It is possible that there is a being that has maximal greatness. (Premise)
  4. Therefore, possibly, it is necessarily true that an omniscient, omnipotent, and perfectly good being exists.
  5. Therefore, (by axiom 5 of S5) it is necessarily true that an omniscient, omnipotent and perfectly good being exists.
  6. Therefore, an omniscient, omnipotent and perfectly good being exists.

Plantinga argued that, although the first premise is not rationally established, it is not contrary to reason. Michael Martin argued that, if certain components of perfection are contradictory, such as omnipotence and omniscience, then the first premise is contrary to reason. Martin also proposed parodies of the argument, suggesting that the existence of anything can be demonstrated with Plantinga's argument, provided it is defined as perfect or special in every possible world.[45]

Another Christian philosopher, William Lane Craig, characterizes Plantinga's argument in a slightly different way:

  1. It is possible that a maximally great being exists.
  2. If it is possible that a maximally great being exists, then a maximally great being exists in some possible world.
  3. If a maximally great being exists in some possible world, then it exists in every possible world.
  4. If a maximally great being exists in every possible world, then it exists in the actual world.
  5. If a maximally great being exists in the actual world, then a maximally great being exists.
  6. Therefore, a maximally great being exists.[46]

According to Craig, premises (2)–(5) are relatively uncontroversial among philosophers, but "the epistemic entertainability of premise (1) (or its denial) does not guarantee its metaphysical possibility."[47] Furthermore the philosopher Richard M. Gale argued that premise three, the "possibility premise", begs the question. He stated that one only has the epistemic right to accept the premise if one understands the nested modal operators, and that if one understands them within the system S5—without which the argument fails—then one understands that "possibly necessarily" is in essence the same as "necessarily".[48] Thus the premise begs the question because the conclusion is embedded within it.

On S5 systems in general, James Garson writes that "the words ‘necessarily’ and ‘possibly’, have many different uses. So the acceptability of axioms for modal logic depends on which of these uses we have in mind."[49]

Sankara's dictum edit

An approach to supporting the possibility premise in Plantinga's version of the argument was attempted by Alexander Pruss. He started with the 8th–9th-century AD Indian philosopher Sankara's dictum that if something is impossible, we cannot have a perception (even a non-veridical one) that it is the case. It follows that if we have a perception that p, then even though it might not be the case that p, it is at least the case that possibly p. If mystics in fact perceive the existence of a maximally great being, it follows that the existence of a maximally great being is at least possible.[50]

Automated reasoning edit

Paul Oppenheimer and Edward N. Zalta used an automated theorem prover—Prover9—to validate Anselm's ontological thesis. Prover9 subsequently discovered a simpler, formally valid (if not necessarily sound) ontological argument from a single non-logical premise.[51]

Christoph Benzmuller and Bruno Woltzenlogel Paleo used an automated theorem prover to validate Scott's version of Gödel's ontological argument. It has been shown by the same researchers that Gödel's ontological argument is inconsistent. However, Scott's version of Gödel's ontological argument is consistent and thus valid.

Criticisms and objections edit

Gaunilo edit

One of the earliest recorded objections to Anselm's argument was raised by one of Anselm's contemporaries, Gaunilo of Marmoutiers. He invited his reader to conceive an island "more excellent" than any other island. He suggested that, according to Anselm's proof, this island must necessarily exist, as an island that exists would be more excellent.[52] Gaunilo's criticism does not explicitly demonstrate a flaw in Anselm's argument; rather, it argues that if Anselm's argument is sound, so are many other arguments of the same logical form, which cannot be accepted.[53] He offered a further criticism of Anselm's ontological argument, suggesting that the notion of God cannot be conceived, as Anselm had asserted. He argued that many theists would accept that God, by nature, cannot be fully comprehended. Therefore, if humans cannot fully conceive of God, the ontological argument cannot work.[54]

Anselm responded to Gaunilo's criticism by arguing that the argument applied only to concepts with necessary existence. He suggested that only a being with necessary existence can fulfill the remit of "that than which nothing greater can be conceived". Furthermore, a contingent object, such as an island, could always be improved and thus could never reach a state of perfection. For that reason, Anselm dismissed any argument that did not relate to a being with necessary existence.[52]

Other parodies have been presented, including the devil corollary, the no devil corollary and the extreme no devil corollary. The devil corollary proposes that a being than which nothing worse can be conceived exists in the understanding (sometimes the term lesser is used in place of worse). Using Anselm's logical form, the parody argues that if it exists in the understanding, a worse being would be one that exists in reality; thus, such a being exists. The no devil corollary is similar, but argues that a worse being would be one that does not exist in reality, so does not exist. The extreme no devil corollary advances on this, proposing that a worse being would be that which does not exist in the understanding, so such a being exists neither in reality nor in the understanding. Timothy Chambers argued that the devil corollary is more powerful than Gaunilo's challenge because it withstands the challenges that may defeat Gaunilo's parody. He also claimed that the extreme no devil corollary is a strong challenge, as it "underwrites" the no devil corollary, which "threatens Anselm's argument at its very foundations".[55]

Thomas Aquinas edit

Thomas Aquinas, while proposing five proofs of God's existence in his Summa Theologica, objected to Anselm's argument. He suggested that people cannot know the nature of God and, therefore, cannot conceive of God in the way Anselm proposed.[56] The ontological argument would be meaningful only to someone who understands the essence of God completely. Aquinas reasoned that, as only God can completely know His essence, only He could use the argument.[57] His rejection of the ontological argument led other Catholic theologians to also reject the argument.[58]

David Hume edit

 
David Hume reasoned that an ontological argument was not possible.

Scottish philosopher and empiricist David Hume argued that nothing can be proven to exist using only a priori reasoning.[59] In his Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, the character Cleanthes proposes a criticism:

...there is an evident absurdity in pretending to demonstrate a matter of fact, or to prove it by any arguments a priori. Nothing is demonstrable, unless the contrary implies a contradiction. Nothing, that is distinctly conceivable, implies a contradiction. Whatever we conceive as existent, we can also conceive as non-existent. There is no being, therefore, whose non-existence implies a contradiction. Consequently there is no being, whose existence is demonstrable.[60]

— David Hume, Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, Part 9

Hume also suggested that, as we have no abstract idea of existence (apart from as part of our ideas of other objects), we cannot claim that the idea of God implies his existence. He suggested that any conception of God we may have, we can conceive either of existing or of not existing. He believed that existence is not a quality (or perfection), so a completely perfect being need not exist. Thus, he claimed that it is not a contradiction to deny God's existence.[59] Although this criticism is directed against a cosmological argument, similar to that of Samuel Clarke in his first Boyle Lecture, it has been applied to ontological arguments as well.[61]

Immanuel Kant edit

 
Immanuel Kant proposed that existence is not a predicate.

Immanuel Kant put forward an influential criticism of the ontological argument in his Critique of Pure Reason.[62] His criticism is primarily directed at Descartes, but also attacks Leibniz. It is shaped by his central distinction between analytic and synthetic propositions. In an analytic proposition, the predicate concept is contained in its subject concept; in a synthetic proposition, the predicate concept is not contained in its subject concept.

Kant questions the intelligibility of the concept of a necessary being. He considers examples of necessary propositions, such as "a triangle has three angles", and rejects the transfer of this logic to the existence of God. First, he argues that such necessary propositions are necessarily true only if such a being exists: If a triangle exists, it must have three angles. The necessary proposition, he argues, does not make the existence of a triangle necessary. Thus he argues that, if the proposition "X exists" is posited, it would follow that, if X exists, it exists necessarily; this does not mean that X exists in reality.[63] Second, he argues that contradictions arise only when the predicate is rejected but the subject is maintained and, therefore, a judgement of non-existence cannot be a contradiction, as it denies the subject.[62]

Kant then proposes that the statement "God exists" must be analytic or synthetic—the predicate must be inside or outside of the subject, respectively. If the proposition is analytic, as the ontological argument takes it to be, then the statement would be true only because of the meaning given to the words. Kant claims that this is merely a tautology and cannot say anything about reality. However, if the statement is synthetic, the ontological argument does not work, as the existence of God is not contained within the definition of God (and, as such, evidence for God would need to be found).[64]

Kant goes on to write, "'being' is evidently not a real predicate"[62] and cannot be part of the concept of something. He proposes that existence is not a predicate, or quality. This is because existence does not add to the essence of a being, but merely indicates its occurrence in reality. He states that by taking the subject of God with all its predicates and then asserting that God exists, "I add no new predicate to the conception of God". He argues that the ontological argument works only if existence is a predicate; if this is not so, he claims the ontological argument is invalidated, as it is then conceivable a completely perfect being doesn't exist.[23]

In addition, Kant claims that the concept of God is not one of a particular sense; rather, it is an "object of pure thought".[62] He asserts that God exists outside the realm of experience and nature. Because we cannot experience God through experience, Kant argues that it is impossible to know how we would verify God's existence. This is in contrast to material concepts, which can be verified by means of the senses.[65]

Douglas Gasking edit

Australian philosopher Douglas Gasking (1911–1994) developed a version of the ontological argument meant to prove God's non-existence. It was not intended to be serious; rather, its purpose was to illustrate the problems Gasking saw in the ontological argument.[66]

Gasking asserted that the creation of the world is the most marvellous achievement imaginable. The merit of such an achievement is the product of its quality and the creator's disability: the greater the disability of the creator, the more impressive the achievement. Non-existence, Gasking asserts, would be the greatest handicap. Therefore, if the universe is the product of an existent creator, we could conceive of a greater being—one which does not exist. A non-existent creator is greater than one which exists, so God does not exist. Gasking's proposition that the greatest disability would be non-existence is a response to Anselm's assumption that existence is a predicate and perfection. Gasking uses this logic to assume that non-existence must be a disability.[66]

Graham Oppy criticized the argument, viewing it as a weak parody of the ontological argument. He stated that, although it may be accepted that it would be a greater achievement for a non-existent creator to create something than a creator who exists, there is no reason to assume that a non-existent creator would be a greater being. He continued by arguing that there is no reason to view the creation of the world as "the most marvellous achievement imaginable". Finally, he stated that it may be inconceivable for a non-existent being to create anything at all.[29]

William L. Rowe edit

American philosopher of religion William L. Rowe notably believed that the structure of the ontological argument was such that it inherently begs the question of God's existence, that is to say, that one must have a presupposed belief in God's existence in order to accept the argument's conclusion. To illustrate this, Rowe devises the concept of a "unicornex," defined as a "unicorn that actually exists." Note that some possible object is a unicorn, but since in fact no unicorns exist, no possible object is a unicornex. Thus, in order to know that unicornexes are possible, you must know that unicornexes exist. Rowe believes that this is analogous to the ontological argument's conception of God in the formulation of the greatest conceivable being: the greatest conceivable being is an omnipotent, omnipowerful, supremely perfect, existing being. Nothing in that definition explicitly demonstrates existence, it is simply added on as a necessary philosophical quality in the same sense that the unicornex is given the quality of existence as well. Therefore, to Rowe, there is no way to know the existence of the greatest conceivable being without already knowing that he exists—the definition simply begs the question.[67]

Coherence of a maximally great being edit

In his development of the ontological argument, Leibniz attempted to demonstrate the coherence of a supremely perfect being.[29] C. D. Broad countered that if two characteristics necessary for God's perfection are incompatible with a third, the notion of a supremely perfect being becomes incoherent. The ontological argument assumes the definition of God purported by classical theism: that God is omnipotent, omniscient, and morally perfect.[23] Kenneth Einar Himma claimed that omniscience and omnipotence may be incompatible: if God is omnipotent, then he should be able to create a being with free will; if he is omniscient, then he should know exactly what such a being will do (which may technically render them without free will). This analysis would render the ontological argument incoherent, as the characteristics required of a maximally great being cannot coexist in one being, thus such a being could not exist.[23]

Bertrand Russell edit

Bertrand Russell, during his early Hegelian phase, accepted the argument; he once exclaimed: "Great God in Boots!—the ontological argument is sound!"[68] However, he later criticized the argument, asserting that "the argument does not, to a modern mind, seem very convincing, but it is easier to feel convinced that it must be fallacious than it is to find out precisely where the fallacy lies." He drew a distinction between existence and essence, arguing that the essence of a person can be described and their existence still remain in question.[69]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Szatkowski, Miroslaw, ed. 2012. Ontological Proofs Today. Ontos Verlag. "There are three main periods in the history of ontological arguments. The first was in 11th century, when St. Anselm of Canterbury came up with the first ontological argument" (p. 22).

References edit

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  2. ^ Adamson, Peter (2013-07-04). "From the necessary existent to God". In Adamson, Peter (ed.). Interpreting Avicenna: Critical Essays. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-19073-2.
  3. ^ a b c d e Oppy 2007, pp. 1–2.
  4. ^ Smart, Ninian (1969). Philosophers and religious truth. S.C.M. Press. p. 76. ISBN 9780334012580. Retrieved 2012-01-04.
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  7. ^ Craig, William Lane (2004). To everyone an answer: a case for the Christian worldview : essays in honor of Norman L. Geisler. InterVarsity Press. p. 124. ISBN 978-0-8308-2735-0.
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  38. ^ a b Harris, James Franklin (May 31, 2002). Analytic Philosophy of Religion. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 9781402005305 – via Google Books.
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  40. ^ Sobel, Jordan Howard (2004). Logic and theism: arguments for and against beliefs in God. Cambridge University Press. pp. 81–82. ISBN 978-0-521-82607-5.
  41. ^ "Evolution, Shibboleths, and Philosophers". The Chronicle of Higher Education. April 11, 2010. Retrieved 2010-04-28. Like any Christian (and indeed any theist), I believe that the world has been created by God, and hence 'intelligently designed'.
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  43. ^ a b Plantinga 1998, pp. 65–71.
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  47. ^ Craig, William Lane (2008). Reasonable faith. Crossway. p. 185. ISBN 978-1-4335-0115-9. Premises (2)–(5) of this argument are relatively uncontroversial. Most philosophers would agree that if God's existence is even possible, then he must exist. ...the epistemic entertainability of premise (1) (or its denial) does not guarantee its metaphysical possibility.
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Bibliography edit

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  • Hartshorne, Charles (1962). The Logic of Perfection. LaSalle, Illinois: Open Court.
  • Jori, Alberto (June 2002). "Die Paradoxien des menschlichen Selbstbewusstseins und die notwendige Existenz Gottes — Zu 'Cogitatio' und 'Intellectus' im Streit zwischen Anselm und Gaunilo". In Viola, C.; Kormos, J. (eds.). Rationality from Saint Augustine to Saint Anselm. Proceedings of the International Anselm Conference – Piliscsaba (Hungary) 20–23. Piliscsaba (2005). pp. 197–210.
  • Leaman, Oliver; Groff, Peter S. (2007). Islamic Philosophy A–Z. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0-7486-2089-0.
  • Logan, Ian (2009). Reading Anselm's Proslogion: The History of Anselm's Argument and its Significance Today. Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-7546-6123-8.
  • Malcolm, Norman (1960). "Anselm's Ontological Arguments". In Hick, John (ed.). The Existence of God (Problems of Philosophy). Vol. 69. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-02-085450-0. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help) and in Knowledge and Certainty: Essays and Lectures by Norman Malcolm, Cornell University Press, 1975) ISBN 0-8014-9154-1.
  • Oppy, Graham (1996). Ontological Arguments and Belief in God. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-03900-0.
  • Plantinga, Alvin, ed. (1965). The Ontological Argument from St. Anselm to Contemporary Philosophers. Garden City, New York: Doubleday.
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  • Plantinga, Alvin (1998). Sennett, James F. (ed.). The analytic theist: an Alvin Plantinga reader. William B. Eerdmans Publishing. ISBN 978-0-8028-4229-9.
  • Szatkowski, Miroslaw, ed. (2012). Ontological Proofs Today. Ontos Verlag. ISBN 978-0-8028-4229-9.

External links edit

  • Oppy, Graham. "Ontological Arguments". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Nolan, Lawrence. "Descartes' Ontological argument". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Himma, Kenneth E. "Anselm: Ontological Arguments for God's Existence". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • History of the Ontological Argument with an annotated bibliography.
  • Medieval Sourcebook: Gaunilo: In Behalf of the Fool, and Anselm's Reply.
  • Medieval Sourcebook: Philosophers' Criticisms of Anselm's Ontological Argument for the Being of God.
  • Paul E. Oppenheimer & Edward N. Zalta, "On the Logic of the Ontological Argument" from James Tomberlin ed., Philosophical Perspectives 5: The Philosophy of Religion (Atascadero: Ridgeview, 1991) pp. 509–529.
  • Gregory S. Neal, "" from Grace Incarnate (1990).
  • Maciej Nowicki, "" Logic and Logical Philosophy (2006) 15: 355–368.
  • Brown, Paterson. , Analysis, 1961.

ontological, argument, ontological, argument, philosophical, argument, made, from, ontological, basis, that, advanced, support, existence, such, arguments, tend, refer, state, being, existing, more, specifically, ontological, arguments, commonly, conceived, pr. An ontological argument is a philosophical argument made from an ontological basis that is advanced in support of the existence of God Such arguments tend to refer to the state of being or existing More specifically ontological arguments are commonly conceived a priori in regard to the organization of the universe whereby if such organizational structure is true God must exist The first ontological argument in Western Christian tradition i was proposed by Saint Anselm of Canterbury in his 1078 work Proslogion Latin Proslogium lit Discourse on the Existence of God in which he defines God as a being than which no greater can be conceived and argues that such a being must exist in the mind even in that of the person who denies the existence of God 1 From this he suggests that if the greatest possible being exists in the mind it must also exist in reality because if it existed only in the mind then an even greater being must be possible one who exists both in mind and in reality Therefore this greatest possible being must exist in reality Similarly in the East Avicenna s Proof of the Truthful argued albeit for very different reasons that there must be a necessary existent 2 Seventeenth century French philosopher Rene Descartes employed a similar argument to Anselm s Descartes published several variations of his argument each of which center on the idea that God s existence is immediately inferable from a clear and distinct idea of a supremely perfect being In the early 18th century Gottfried Leibniz augmented Descartes ideas in an attempt to prove that a supremely perfect being is a coherent concept A more recent ontological argument came from Kurt Godel who proposed a formal argument for God s existence Norman Malcolm also revived the ontological argument in 1960 when he located a second stronger ontological argument in Anselm s work Alvin Plantinga challenged this argument and proposed an alternative based on modal logic Attempts have also been made to validate Anselm s proof using an automated theorem prover Other arguments have been categorised as ontological including those made by Islamic philosophers Mulla Sadra and Allama Tabatabai Just as the ontological argument has been popular a number of criticisms and objections have also been mounted Its first critic was Gaunilo of Marmoutiers a contemporary of Anselm s Gaunilo suggesting that the ontological argument could be used to prove the existence of anything uses the analogy of a perfect island Such would be the first of many parodies all of which attempted to show the absurd consequences of the ontological argument Later Thomas Aquinas rejected the argument on the basis that humans cannot know God s nature David Hume also offered an empirical objection criticising its lack of evidential reasoning and rejecting the idea that anything can exist necessarily Immanuel Kant s critique was based on what he saw as the false premise that existence is a predicate arguing that existing adds nothing including perfection to the essence of a being Thus a supremely perfect being can be conceived not to exist Finally philosophers such as C D Broad dismissed the coherence of a maximally great being proposing that some attributes of greatness are incompatible with others rendering maximally great being incoherent Contemporary defenders of the ontological argument include Alvin Plantinga Yujin Nagasawa and Robert Maydole Contents 1 Classification 2 Development 2 1 Anselm 2 2 Rene Descartes 2 3 Baruch Spinoza 2 4 Gottfried Leibniz 2 5 Mulla Sadra 2 6 G W F Hegel 2 7 Kurt Godel 2 8 Modal versions of the ontological argument 2 8 1 Hartshorne and Malcolm 2 8 2 Alvin Plantinga 2 9 Sankara s dictum 2 10 Automated reasoning 3 Criticisms and objections 3 1 Gaunilo 3 2 Thomas Aquinas 3 3 David Hume 3 4 Immanuel Kant 3 5 Douglas Gasking 3 6 William L Rowe 3 7 Coherence of a maximally great being 3 8 Bertrand Russell 4 Notes 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksClassification editThe traditional definition of an ontological argument was given by Immanuel Kant 3 He contrasted the ontological argument literally any argument concerned with being 4 with the cosmological and physio theoretical arguments 5 According to the Kantian view ontological arguments are those founded through a priori reasoning 3 Graham Oppy who elsewhere expressed that he see s no urgent reason to depart from the traditional definition 3 defined ontological arguments as those which begin with nothing but analytic a priori and necessary premises and conclude that God exists Oppy admits however that not all of the traditional characteristics of an ontological argument i e analyticity necessity and a priority are found in all ontological arguments 1 and in his 2007 work Ontological Arguments and Belief in God suggested that a better definition of an ontological argument would employ only considerations entirely internal to the theistic worldview 3 Oppy subclassified ontological arguments based on the qualities of their premises using the following qualities 1 3 definitional arguments that invoke definitions conceptual or hyperintensional arguments that invoke the possession of certain kinds of ideas or concepts modal arguments that consider possibilities meinongian arguments that assert a distinction between different categories of existence experiential arguments that employ the idea of God existing solely to those who have had experience of him mereological arguments that draw on the theory of the whole part relation 6 higher order arguments that observe that any collection of properties that a does not include all properties and b is closed under entailment is possibly jointly instantiated Hegelian the arguments of Hegel William Lane Craig criticised Oppy s study as too vague for useful classification Craig argues that an argument can be classified as ontological if it attempts to deduce the existence of God along with other necessary truths from his definition He suggests that proponents of ontological arguments would claim that if one fully understood the concept of God one must accept his existence 7 William L Rowe defines ontological arguments as those which start from the definition of God and using only a priori principles conclude with God s existence 8 Development editAlthough a version of the ontological argument appears explicitly in the writings of the ancient Greek philosopher Xenophanes and variations appear in writings by Parmenides Plato and the Neoplatonists 9 the mainstream view is that the ontological argument was first clearly stated and developed by Anselm of Canterbury 1 10 11 Some scholars argue that Islamic philosopher Avicenna Ibn Sina developed a special kind of ontological argument before Anselm 12 13 while others have doubted this position 14 15 16 Daniel Dombrowski marked three major stages in the development of the argument 17 Anselm s initial explicit formulation the 18th century criticisms of Kant and Hume and the identification of a second ontological argument in Anselm s Proslogion by 20th century philosophers Anselm edit nbsp Anselm of Canterbury was the first to attempt an ontological argument for God s existence Main article Proslogion Theologian and philosopher Anselm of Canterbury 1033 1109 proposed an ontological argument in the 2nd and 3rd chapters of his Proslogion 18 Anselm s argument was not presented in order to prove God s existence rather Proslogion was a work of meditation in which he documented how the idea of God became self evident to him 19 In Chapter 2 of the Proslogion Anselm defines God as a being than which no greater can be conceived 1 While Anselm has often been credited as the first to understand God as the greatest possible being this perception was actually widely described among ancient Greek philosophers and early Christian writers 20 21 He suggests that even the fool can understand this concept and this understanding itself means that the being must exist in the mind The concept must exist either only in our mind or in both our mind and in reality If such a being exists only in our mind then a greater being that which exists in the mind and in reality can be conceived this argument is generally regarded as a reductio ad absurdum because the view of the fool is proven to be inconsistent Therefore if we can conceive of a being than which nothing greater can be conceived it must exist in reality Thus a being than which nothing greater could be conceived which Anselm defined as God must exist in reality 22 Anselm s argument in Chapter 2 can be summarized as follows 23 It is a conceptual truth or so to speak true by definition that God is a being than which none greater can be imagined that is the greatest possible being that can be imagined God exists as an idea in the mind A being that exists as an idea in the mind and in reality is other things being equal greater than a being that exists only as an idea in the mind Thus if God exists only as an idea in the mind then we can imagine something that is greater than God that is a greatest possible being that does exist But we cannot imagine something that is greater than God for it is a contradiction to suppose that we can imagine a being greater than the greatest possible being that can be imagined Therefore God exists In Chapter 3 Anselm presents a further argument in the same vein 23 By definition God is a being than which none greater can be imagined A being that necessarily exists in reality is greater than a being that does not necessarily exist Thus by definition if God exists as an idea in the mind but does not necessarily exist in reality then we can imagine something that is greater than God But we cannot imagine something that is greater than God Thus if God exists in the mind as an idea then God necessarily exists in reality God exists in the mind as an idea Therefore God necessarily exists in reality This contains the notion of a being that cannot be conceived not to exist He argued that if something can be conceived not to exist then something greater can be conceived Consequently a thing than which nothing greater can be conceived cannot be conceived not to exist and so it must exist This can be read as a restatement of the argument in Chapter 2 although Norman Malcolm believes it to be a different stronger argument 24 Rene Descartes edit nbsp French thinker Rene Descartes proposed several arguments that could be termed ontological Rene Descartes 1596 1650 proposed a number of ontological arguments that differ from Anselm s formulation Generally speaking they are less formal arguments than they are natural intuition In Meditation Book V Descartes wrote 25 But if the mere fact that I can produce from my thought the idea of something entails that everything that I clearly and distinctly perceive to belong to that thing really does belong to it is not this a possible basis for another argument to prove the existence of God Certainly the idea of God or a supremely perfect being is one that I find within me just as surely as the idea of any shape or number And my understanding that it belongs to his nature that he always exists is no less clear and distinct than is the case when I prove of any shape or number that some property belongs to its nature Descartes argues that God s existence can be deduced from his nature just as geometric ideas can be deduced from the nature of shapes he used the deduction of the sizes of angles in a triangle as an example He suggested that the concept of God is that of a supremely perfect being holding all perfections He seems to have assumed that existence is a predicate of a perfection Thus if the notion of God did not include existence it would not be supremely perfect as it would be lacking a perfection Consequently the notion of a supremely perfect God who does not exist Descartes argues is unintelligible Therefore according to his nature God must exist 26 Baruch Spinoza edit In Spinoza s Short Treatise on God Man and His Well Being he wrote a section titled Treating of God and What Pertains to Him in which he discusses God s existence and what God is He starts off by saying whether there is a God this we say can be proved 27 His proof for God follows a similar structure as Descartes ontological argument Descartes attempts to prove God s existence by arguing that there must be some one thing that is supremely good through which all good things have their goodness 28 Spinoza s argument differs in that he does not move straight from the conceivability of the greatest being to the existence of God but rather uses a deductive argument from the idea of God Spinoza says that man s ideas do not come from himself but from some sort of external cause Thus the things whose characteristics a man knows must have come from some prior source So if man has the idea of God then God must exist before this thought because man cannot create an idea of his own imagination 27 Gottfried Leibniz edit nbsp German philosopher Gottfried Leibniz attempted to prove the coherence of a supremely perfect being Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz saw a problem with Descartes ontological argument that Descartes had not asserted the coherence of a supremely perfect being He proposed that unless the coherence of a supremely perfect being could be demonstrated the ontological argument fails Leibniz saw perfection as impossible to analyse therefore it would be impossible to demonstrate that all perfections are incompatible He reasoned that all perfections can exist together in a single entity and that Descartes argument is still valid 29 Mulla Sadra edit See also Transcendent theosophy Mulla Sadra c 1571 2 1640 was an Iranian Shia Islamic philosopher who was influenced by earlier Muslim philosophers such as Avicenna and Suhrawardi as well as the Sufi metaphysician Ibn Arabi Sadra discussed Avicenna s arguments for the existence of God claiming that they were not a priori He rejected the argument on the basis that existence precedes essence or that the existence of human beings is more fundamental than their essence 30 Sadra put forward a new argument known as Seddiqin Argument or Argument of the Righteous The argument attempts to prove the existence of God through the reality of existence and to conclude with God s pre eternal necessity In this argument a thing is demonstrated through itself and a path is identical with the goal In other arguments the truth is attained from an external source such as from the possible to the necessary from the originated to the eternal origin or from motion to the unmoved mover In the argument of the righteous there is no middle term other than the truth 31 His version of the ontological argument can be summarized as follows 30 There is existence Existence is a perfection above which no perfection may be conceived God is perfection and perfection in existence Existence is a singular and simple reality there is no metaphysical pluralism That singular reality is graded in intensity in a scale of perfection that is a denial of a pure monism That scale must have a limit point a point of greatest intensity and of greatest existence Hence God exists Mulla Sadra describes this argument in his main work al asfar al arba a four journeys as follows Existence is a single objective and simple reality and there is no difference between its parts unless in terms of perfection and imperfection strength and weakness And the culmination of its perfection where there is nothing more perfect is its independence from any other thing Nothing more perfect should be conceivable as every imperfect thing belongs to another thing and needs this other to become perfect And as it has already been explicated perfection is prior to imperfection actuality to potency and existence to non existence Also it has been explained that the perfection of a thing is the thing itself and not a thing in addition to it Thus either existence is independent of others or it is in need of others The former is the Necessary which is pure existence Nothing is more perfect than Him And in Him there is no room for non existence or imperfection The latter is other than Him and is regarded as His acts and effects and for other than Him there is no subsistence unless through Him For there is no imperfection in the reality of existence and imperfection is added to existence only because of the quality of being caused as it is impossible for an effect to be identical with its cause in terms of existence 32 G W F Hegel edit In response to Kant s rejection of traditional speculative philosophy in his First Critique and to Kant s rejection of the Ontological Argument G W F Hegel proposed throughout his lifetime works that Immanuel Kant was mistaken Hegel took aim at Kant s famous 100 argument Kant had said that it is one thing to have 100 in my mind and quite a different thing to have 100 in my pocket According to Kant we can imagine a God but that doesn t prove that God exists Hegel argued that Kant s formulation was inaccurate Hegel referred to Kant s error in all of his major works from 1807 to 1831 For Hegel The True is the Whole PhG para 20 For Hegel the True is the Geist which is to say Spirit which is to say God Thus God is the Whole of the Cosmos both unseen as well as seen This error of Kant therefore was his comparison of a finite contingent entity such as 100 with Infinite necessary Being i e the Whole When regarded as the Whole of Being unseen as well as seen and not simply one being among many then the Ontological Argument flourishes and its logical necessity becomes obvious according to Hegel The final book contract that Hegel signed in the year that he died 1831 was for a book entitled Lectures on the Proofs of the Existence of God Hegel died before finishing the book It was to have three sections 1 The Cosmological Argument 2 The Teleological Argument and 3 the Ontological Argument Hegel died before beginning sections 2 and 3 His work is published today as incomplete with only part of his Cosmological Argument intact To peruse Hegel s ideas on the Ontological Argument scholars have had to piece together his arguments from various paragraphs from his other works Certain scholars have suggested that all of Hegel s philosophy composes an ontological argument 33 34 Kurt Godel edit Main article Godel s ontological proof Mathematician Kurt Godel provided a formal argument for God s existence The argument was constructed by Godel but not published until long after his death He provided an argument based on modal logic he uses the conception of properties ultimately concluding with God s existence 35 Definition 1 x is God like if and only if x has as essential properties those and only those properties which are positiveDefinition 2 A is an essence of x if and only if for every property B x has B necessarily if and only if A entails BDefinition 3 x necessarily exists if and only if every essence of x is necessarily exemplifiedAxiom 1 If a property is positive then its negation is not positiveAxiom 2 Any property entailed by i e strictly implied by a positive property is positiveAxiom 3 The property of being God like is positiveAxiom 4 If a property is positive then it is necessarily positiveAxiom 5 Necessary existence is positiveAxiom 6 For any property P if P is positive then being necessarily P is positiveTheorem 1 If a property is positive then it is consistent i e possibly exemplifiedCorollary 1 The property of being God like is consistentTheorem 2 If something is God like then the property of being God like is an essence of that thing Theorem 3 Necessarily the property of being God like is exemplified Godel defined being god like as having every positive property He left the term positive undefined Godel proposed that it is understood in an aesthetic and moral sense or alternatively as the opposite of privation the absence of necessary qualities in the universe He warned against interpreting positive as being morally or aesthetically good the greatest advantage and least disadvantage as this includes negative characteristics Instead he suggested that positive should be interpreted as being perfect or purely good without negative characteristics 36 Godel s listed theorems follow from the axioms so most criticisms of the theory focus on those axioms or the assumptions made For instance axiom 5 does not explain why necessary existence is positive instead of possible existence an axiom which the whole argument follows from Or for Axiom 1 to use another example the negation of a positive property both includes the lack of any properties and the opposite property and only the lack of any properties is a privation of a property not the opposite property for instance the lack of happiness can symbolize either sadness or having no emotion but only lacking emotion could be seen as a privation or negative property Either of these axioms being seen as not mapping to reality would cause the whole argument to fail Oppy argued that Godel gives no definition of positive properties He suggested that if these positive properties form a set there is no reason to believe that any such set exists which is theologically interesting or that there is only one set of positive properties which is theologically interesting 35 Modal versions of the ontological argument edit Modal logic deals with the logic of possibility as well as necessity Paul Oppenheimer and Edward N Zalta note that for Anselm s Proslogion chapter 2 Many recent authors have interpreted this argument as a modal one In the phrase that than which none greater can be conceived the word can could be construed as referring to a possibility Nevertheless the authors write that the logic of the ontological argument itself doesn t include inferences based on this modality 37 However there have been newer avowedly modal logic versions of the ontological argument and on the application of this type of logic to the argument James Franklin Harris writes D ifferent versions of the ontological argument the so called modal versions of the argument which arguably avoid the part of Anselm s argument that treats existence as a predicate began to emerge The modal logic version of these forms of defense of the ontological argument has been the most significant development 38 Hartshorne and Malcolm edit Charles Hartshorne and Norman Malcolm are primarily responsible for introducing modal versions of the argument into the contemporary debate Both claimed that Anselm had two versions of the ontological argument the second of which was a modal logic version According to James Harris this version is represented by Malcolm thus If it that than which nothing greater can be conceived can be conceived at all it must exist For no one who denies or doubts the existence of a being a greater than which is inconceivable denies or doubts that if it did exist its nonexistence either in reality or in the understanding would be impossible For otherwise it would not be a being a greater than which cannot be conceived But as to whatever can be conceived but does not exist if it were to exist its nonexistence either in reality or in the understanding would be possible Therefore if a being a greater than which cannot be conceived can even be conceived it must exist Hartshorne says that for Anselm necessary existence is a superior manner of existence to ordinary contingent existence and that ordinary contingent existence is a defect For Hartshorne both Hume and Kant focused only upon whether what exists is greater than what does not exist However Anselm s point is that what exists and cannot not exist is greater than that which exists and can not exist This avoids the question of whether or not existence is a predicate 38 Referring to the two ontological arguments proposed by Anselm in Chapters 2 and 3 of his Proslogion Malcolm supported Kant s criticism of Anselm s argument in Chapter 2 that existence cannot be a perfection of something However he identified what he sees as the second ontological argument in Chapter 3 which is not susceptible to such criticism 39 In Anselm s second argument Malcolm identified two key points first that a being whose non existence is logically impossible is greater than a being whose non existence is logically possible and second that God is a being than which a greater cannot be conceived Malcolm supported that definition of God and suggested that it makes the proposition of God s existence a logically necessarily true statement in the same way that a square has four sides is logically necessarily true 39 Thus while rejecting the idea of existence itself being a perfection Malcolm argued that necessary existence is a perfection This he argued proved the existence of an unsurpassably great necessary being Jordan Sobel writes that Malcolm is incorrect in assuming that the argument he is expounding is to be found entirely in Proslogion chapter 3 Anselm intended in Proslogion III not an independent argument for the existence of God but a continuation of the argument of Proslogion II 40 Alvin Plantinga edit nbsp Alvin Plantinga criticized Malcolm s and Hartshorne s ontological arguments and proposed a variation of his own Christian Analytic philosopher Alvin Plantinga 41 criticized Malcolm s and Hartshorne s arguments and offered an alternative Plantinga developed his argument in the books titled The nature of necessity 1974 ch 10 and God Freedom and Evil 1975 part 2 c 42 He argued that if Malcolm does prove the necessary existence of the greatest possible being it follows that there is a being which exists in all worlds whose greatness in some worlds is not surpassed It does not he argued demonstrate that such a being has unsurpassed greatness in this actual world 43 In an attempt to resolve this problem Plantinga differentiated between greatness and excellence A being s excellence in a particular world depends only on its properties in that world a being s greatness depends on its properties in all worlds Therefore the greatest possible being must have maximal excellence in every possible world Plantinga then restated Malcolm s argument using the concept of maximal greatness He argued that it is possible for a being with maximal greatness to exist so a being with maximal greatness exists in a possible world If this is the case then a being with maximal greatness exists in every world and therefore in this world 43 The conclusion relies on a form of modal axiom 5 of S5 which states that if something is possibly true then its possibility is necessary it is possibly true in all worlds in symbols A A displaystyle Diamond A to Box Diamond A nbsp Plantinga s version of S5 suggests that To say that p is possibly necessarily true is to say that with regard to one possible world it is true at all worlds but in that case it is true at all worlds and so it is simply necessary 44 In other words to say that p is necessarily possible means that p is true in at least one possible world W if it is an actual world Plantinga also used Axioms B of S5 A A displaystyle A to Box Diamond A nbsp and thus it is true in all worlds because its omnipotence omniscience and moral perfection are its essence In the 1975 version of the argument Plantinga clarified that 42 it follows that if W had been actual it would have been impossible that there be no such being That is if W had been actual 33 There is no omnipotent omniscient and morally perfect being would have been an impossible proposition But if a proposition is impossible in at least one possible world then it is impossible in every possible world what is impossible does not vary from world to world Accordingly 33 is impossible in the actual world i e impossible simpliciter But if it is impossible that there be no such being then there actually exists a being that is omnipotent omniscient and morally perfect this being furthermore has these qualities essentially and exists in every possible world A version of his argument may be formulated as follows 29 A being has maximal excellence in a given possible world W if and only if it is omnipotent omniscient and wholly good in W and A being has maximal greatness if it has maximal excellence in every possible world It is possible that there is a being that has maximal greatness Premise Therefore possibly it is necessarily true that an omniscient omnipotent and perfectly good being exists Therefore by axiom 5 of S5 it is necessarily true that an omniscient omnipotent and perfectly good being exists Therefore an omniscient omnipotent and perfectly good being exists Plantinga argued that although the first premise is not rationally established it is not contrary to reason Michael Martin argued that if certain components of perfection are contradictory such as omnipotence and omniscience then the first premise is contrary to reason Martin also proposed parodies of the argument suggesting that the existence of anything can be demonstrated with Plantinga s argument provided it is defined as perfect or special in every possible world 45 Another Christian philosopher William Lane Craig characterizes Plantinga s argument in a slightly different way It is possible that a maximally great being exists If it is possible that a maximally great being exists then a maximally great being exists in some possible world If a maximally great being exists in some possible world then it exists in every possible world If a maximally great being exists in every possible world then it exists in the actual world If a maximally great being exists in the actual world then a maximally great being exists Therefore a maximally great being exists 46 According to Craig premises 2 5 are relatively uncontroversial among philosophers but the epistemic entertainability of premise 1 or its denial does not guarantee its metaphysical possibility 47 Furthermore the philosopher Richard M Gale argued that premise three the possibility premise begs the question He stated that one only has the epistemic right to accept the premise if one understands the nested modal operators and that if one understands them within the system S5 without which the argument fails then one understands that possibly necessarily is in essence the same as necessarily 48 Thus the premise begs the question because the conclusion is embedded within it On S5 systems in general James Garson writes that the words necessarily and possibly have many different uses So the acceptability of axioms for modal logic depends on which of these uses we have in mind 49 Sankara s dictum edit An approach to supporting the possibility premise in Plantinga s version of the argument was attempted by Alexander Pruss He started with the 8th 9th century AD Indian philosopher Sankara s dictum that if something is impossible we cannot have a perception even a non veridical one that it is the case It follows that if we have a perception that p then even though it might not be the case that p it is at least the case that possibly p If mystics in fact perceive the existence of a maximally great being it follows that the existence of a maximally great being is at least possible 50 Automated reasoning edit Paul Oppenheimer and Edward N Zalta used an automated theorem prover Prover9 to validate Anselm s ontological thesis Prover9 subsequently discovered a simpler formally valid if not necessarily sound ontological argument from a single non logical premise 51 Christoph Benzmuller and Bruno Woltzenlogel Paleo used an automated theorem prover to validate Scott s version of Godel s ontological argument It has been shown by the same researchers that Godel s ontological argument is inconsistent However Scott s version of Godel s ontological argument is consistent and thus valid Criticisms and objections editGaunilo edit One of the earliest recorded objections to Anselm s argument was raised by one of Anselm s contemporaries Gaunilo of Marmoutiers He invited his reader to conceive an island more excellent than any other island He suggested that according to Anselm s proof this island must necessarily exist as an island that exists would be more excellent 52 Gaunilo s criticism does not explicitly demonstrate a flaw in Anselm s argument rather it argues that if Anselm s argument is sound so are many other arguments of the same logical form which cannot be accepted 53 He offered a further criticism of Anselm s ontological argument suggesting that the notion of God cannot be conceived as Anselm had asserted He argued that many theists would accept that God by nature cannot be fully comprehended Therefore if humans cannot fully conceive of God the ontological argument cannot work 54 Anselm responded to Gaunilo s criticism by arguing that the argument applied only to concepts with necessary existence He suggested that only a being with necessary existence can fulfill the remit of that than which nothing greater can be conceived Furthermore a contingent object such as an island could always be improved and thus could never reach a state of perfection For that reason Anselm dismissed any argument that did not relate to a being with necessary existence 52 Other parodies have been presented including the devil corollary the no devil corollary and the extreme no devil corollary The devil corollary proposes that a being than which nothing worse can be conceived exists in the understanding sometimes the term lesser is used in place of worse Using Anselm s logical form the parody argues that if it exists in the understanding a worse being would be one that exists in reality thus such a being exists The no devil corollary is similar but argues that a worse being would be one that does not exist in reality so does not exist The extreme no devil corollary advances on this proposing that a worse being would be that which does not exist in the understanding so such a being exists neither in reality nor in the understanding Timothy Chambers argued that the devil corollary is more powerful than Gaunilo s challenge because it withstands the challenges that may defeat Gaunilo s parody He also claimed that the extreme no devil corollary is a strong challenge as it underwrites the no devil corollary which threatens Anselm s argument at its very foundations 55 Thomas Aquinas edit Thomas Aquinas while proposing five proofs of God s existence in his Summa Theologica objected to Anselm s argument He suggested that people cannot know the nature of God and therefore cannot conceive of God in the way Anselm proposed 56 The ontological argument would be meaningful only to someone who understands the essence of God completely Aquinas reasoned that as only God can completely know His essence only He could use the argument 57 His rejection of the ontological argument led other Catholic theologians to also reject the argument 58 David Hume edit nbsp David Hume reasoned that an ontological argument was not possible Scottish philosopher and empiricist David Hume argued that nothing can be proven to exist using only a priori reasoning 59 In his Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion the character Cleanthes proposes a criticism there is an evident absurdity in pretending to demonstrate a matter of fact or to prove it by any arguments a priori Nothing is demonstrable unless the contrary implies a contradiction Nothing that is distinctly conceivable implies a contradiction Whatever we conceive as existent we can also conceive as non existent There is no being therefore whose non existence implies a contradiction Consequently there is no being whose existence is demonstrable 60 David Hume Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion Part 9 Hume also suggested that as we have no abstract idea of existence apart from as part of our ideas of other objects we cannot claim that the idea of God implies his existence He suggested that any conception of God we may have we can conceive either of existing or of not existing He believed that existence is not a quality or perfection so a completely perfect being need not exist Thus he claimed that it is not a contradiction to deny God s existence 59 Although this criticism is directed against a cosmological argument similar to that of Samuel Clarke in his first Boyle Lecture it has been applied to ontological arguments as well 61 Immanuel Kant edit nbsp Immanuel Kant proposed that existence is not a predicate Immanuel Kant put forward an influential criticism of the ontological argument in his Critique of Pure Reason 62 His criticism is primarily directed at Descartes but also attacks Leibniz It is shaped by his central distinction between analytic and synthetic propositions In an analytic proposition the predicate concept is contained in its subject concept in a synthetic proposition the predicate concept is not contained in its subject concept Kant questions the intelligibility of the concept of a necessary being He considers examples of necessary propositions such as a triangle has three angles and rejects the transfer of this logic to the existence of God First he argues that such necessary propositions are necessarily true only if such a being exists If a triangle exists it must have three angles The necessary proposition he argues does not make the existence of a triangle necessary Thus he argues that if the proposition X exists is posited it would follow that if X exists it exists necessarily this does not mean that X exists in reality 63 Second he argues that contradictions arise only when the predicate is rejected but the subject is maintained and therefore a judgement of non existence cannot be a contradiction as it denies the subject 62 Kant then proposes that the statement God exists must be analytic or synthetic the predicate must be inside or outside of the subject respectively If the proposition is analytic as the ontological argument takes it to be then the statement would be true only because of the meaning given to the words Kant claims that this is merely a tautology and cannot say anything about reality However if the statement is synthetic the ontological argument does not work as the existence of God is not contained within the definition of God and as such evidence for God would need to be found 64 Kant goes on to write being is evidently not a real predicate 62 and cannot be part of the concept of something He proposes that existence is not a predicate or quality This is because existence does not add to the essence of a being but merely indicates its occurrence in reality He states that by taking the subject of God with all its predicates and then asserting that God exists I add no new predicate to the conception of God He argues that the ontological argument works only if existence is a predicate if this is not so he claims the ontological argument is invalidated as it is then conceivable a completely perfect being doesn t exist 23 In addition Kant claims that the concept of God is not one of a particular sense rather it is an object of pure thought 62 He asserts that God exists outside the realm of experience and nature Because we cannot experience God through experience Kant argues that it is impossible to know how we would verify God s existence This is in contrast to material concepts which can be verified by means of the senses 65 Douglas Gasking edit Australian philosopher Douglas Gasking 1911 1994 developed a version of the ontological argument meant to prove God s non existence It was not intended to be serious rather its purpose was to illustrate the problems Gasking saw in the ontological argument 66 Gasking asserted that the creation of the world is the most marvellous achievement imaginable The merit of such an achievement is the product of its quality and the creator s disability the greater the disability of the creator the more impressive the achievement Non existence Gasking asserts would be the greatest handicap Therefore if the universe is the product of an existent creator we could conceive of a greater being one which does not exist A non existent creator is greater than one which exists so God does not exist Gasking s proposition that the greatest disability would be non existence is a response to Anselm s assumption that existence is a predicate and perfection Gasking uses this logic to assume that non existence must be a disability 66 Graham Oppy criticized the argument viewing it as a weak parody of the ontological argument He stated that although it may be accepted that it would be a greater achievement for a non existent creator to create something than a creator who exists there is no reason to assume that a non existent creator would be a greater being He continued by arguing that there is no reason to view the creation of the world as the most marvellous achievement imaginable Finally he stated that it may be inconceivable for a non existent being to create anything at all 29 William L Rowe edit American philosopher of religion William L Rowe notably believed that the structure of the ontological argument was such that it inherently begs the question of God s existence that is to say that one must have a presupposed belief in God s existence in order to accept the argument s conclusion To illustrate this Rowe devises the concept of a unicornex defined as a unicorn that actually exists Note that some possible object is a unicorn but since in fact no unicorns exist no possible object is a unicornex Thus in order to know that unicornexes are possible you must know that unicornexes exist Rowe believes that this is analogous to the ontological argument s conception of God in the formulation of the greatest conceivable being the greatest conceivable being is an omnipotent omnipowerful supremely perfect existing being Nothing in that definition explicitly demonstrates existence it is simply added on as a necessary philosophical quality in the same sense that the unicornex is given the quality of existence as well Therefore to Rowe there is no way to know the existence of the greatest conceivable being without already knowing that he exists the definition simply begs the question 67 Coherence of a maximally great being edit In his development of the ontological argument Leibniz attempted to demonstrate the coherence of a supremely perfect being 29 C D Broad countered that if two characteristics necessary for God s perfection are incompatible with a third the notion of a supremely perfect being becomes incoherent The ontological argument assumes the definition of God purported by classical theism that God is omnipotent omniscient and morally perfect 23 Kenneth Einar Himma claimed that omniscience and omnipotence may be incompatible if God is omnipotent then he should be able to create a being with free will if he is omniscient then he should know exactly what such a being will do which may technically render them without free will This analysis would render the ontological argument incoherent as the characteristics required of a maximally great being cannot coexist in one being thus such a being could not exist 23 Bertrand Russell edit Bertrand Russell during his early Hegelian phase accepted the argument he once exclaimed Great God in Boots the ontological argument is sound 68 However he later criticized the argument asserting that the argument does not to a modern mind seem very convincing but it is easier to feel convinced that it must be fallacious than it is to find out precisely where the fallacy lies He drew a distinction between existence and essence arguing that the essence of a person can be described and their existence still remain in question 69 Notes edit Szatkowski Miroslaw ed 2012 Ontological Proofs Today Ontos Verlag There are three main periods in the history of ontological arguments The first was in 11th century when St Anselm of Canterbury came up with the first ontological argument p 22 References edit a b c d e Oppy 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on First Philosophy V On the Essence of Material Objects and More on God s Existence Skirry Justin 13 September 2008 Rene Descartes 1596 1650 Overview Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 2011 10 12 a b Spinoza Baruch 2002 Complete Works S Shirley amp M L Morgan Eds p 37 Indianapolis Indiana Hackett Publishing Company Nolan L 2001 June 18 Descartes Ontological Argument a b c d Oppy Graham 15 July 2011 8 February 1996 Ontological Arguments Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy a b Rizvi Sajjad 9 June 2009 Mulla Sadra Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 2011 11 07 Reza Ayatullahi Hamid Mulla Sadra s Argument of the Righteous and a Critical Study of Kant and Hume s Views on the Proofs of God s Existence Asfar Vol 6 pp 14 16 Oppy Graham August 17 2021 Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University via Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Hegel G W F 2011 12 17 1831 Hegel Lectures on the Proofs of the Existence of God Translated by Hodgson Peter C Reprint ed Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 969469 3 a b Oppy Graham 8 February 1996 Ontological Arguments substantive revision 15 July 2011 Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Godel s Ontological Argument Retrieved 2011 12 09 Maydole Robert E 2011 The Blackwell Companion to Natural Theology John Wiley amp Sons p 574 ISBN 978 1 4443 5085 2 Oppenheimer Paul E Zalta Edward N On the Logic of the Ontological Argument Originally published in Philosophical Perspectives 5 The Philosophy of Religion James Tomberlin ed Atascadero Ridgeview 1991 509 529 Even if one were to construe the word can in the definite description that than which none greater can be conceived in terms of metaphysical possibility the logic of the ontological argument itself doesn t include inferences based on this modality a b Harris James Franklin May 31 2002 Analytic Philosophy of Religion Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 9781402005305 via Google Books a b Malcolm 1960 Sobel Jordan Howard 2004 Logic and theism arguments for and against beliefs in God Cambridge University Press pp 81 82 ISBN 978 0 521 82607 5 Evolution Shibboleths and Philosophers The Chronicle of Higher Education April 11 2010 Retrieved 2010 04 28 Like any Christian and indeed any theist I believe that the world has been created by God and hence intelligently designed a b Leslie Alan 2017 Plantinga s Ontological Argument PDF pp 3 4 Archived from the original on May 6 2017 a b Plantinga 1998 pp 65 71 Marenbon John October 2 2006 Medieval Philosophy An Historical and Philosophical Introduction Routledge ISBN 9781134461837 via Google Books Martin Michael 2003 Philosophy of religion an anthology Wiley Blackwell pp 282 293 ISBN 978 0 631 21471 7 Craig William Lane 2008 Reasonable faith Crossway pp 184 185 ISBN 978 1 4335 0115 9 Craig William Lane 2008 Reasonable faith Crossway p 185 ISBN 978 1 4335 0115 9 Premises 2 5 of this argument are relatively uncontroversial Most philosophers would agree that if God s existence is even possible then he must exist the epistemic entertainability of premise 1 or its denial does not guarantee its metaphysical possibility Gale Richard 1993 On the Nature and Existence of God Cambridge University Press p 227 ISBN 978 0 521 45723 1 Garson James 2000 02 29 Modal Logic Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Pruss Alexander R 2001 Samkara s Principle and Two Ontomystical Arguments International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 49 2 111 120 doi 10 1023 A 1017582721225 S2CID 169625246 Oppenheimer Paul Zalta Edward N 2011 A Computationally Discovered Simplification of the Ontological Argument Australasian Journal of Philosophy 89 2 333 349 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 216 1592 doi 10 1080 00048401003674482 S2CID 11912282 a b Cornman James W Lehrer Keith Sotiros Pappas George 1992 Philosophical problems and arguments an introduction Hackett Publishing pp 254 256 ISBN 978 0 87220 124 8 gaunilo Cottingham John 1986 Descartes Blackwell Publishing p 62 ISBN 978 0 631 15046 6 Davis Stephen T 1997 God reason and theistic proofs Edinburgh University Press pp 27 28 ISBN 978 0 7486 0799 0 Oppy Graham 2006 Arguing About Gods Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 86386 5 Oppy Graham 2007 Ontological Arguments and Belief in God Cambridge University Press pp 122 123 ISBN 978 0 521 03900 0 SUMMA THEOLOGIAE The existence of God Prima Pars Q 2 www newadvent org Retrieved 2023 11 17 Toner P J The Existence of God The Catholic Encyclopedia Retrieved 2007 01 19 a b Russell Paul 4 October 2005 Hume on Religion Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 2011 10 16 Hume David 1776 Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion Part 9 via Wikisource Holt Tim The Ontological Argument Hume on a priori Existential Proofs a b c d Kant Immanuel 1958 1787 Critique of Pure Reason Norman Kemp Smith 2nd ed London England Macmillan and Company Limited pp 500 507 first edition pp 592 603 second edition pp 620 631 Grier Michelle February 28 2004 Kant s Critique of Metaphysics Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 2011 10 30 Allen Diogenes Springsted Eric O 2007 Philosophy for Understanding Theology Westminster John Knox Press p 165 ISBN 978 0 664 23180 4 Grier Michelle 2001 Kant s doctrine of transcendental illusion Cambridge University Press p 258 ISBN 978 0 521 66324 3 a b Grey William 2000 Gasking s Proof PDF Analysis 60 4 368 370 doi 10 1111 1467 8284 00257 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 04 07 Retrieved 2006 01 15 Davis Stephen T 1997 God reason and theistic proofs Grand Rapids Michigan W B Eerdmans ISBN 0 8028 4450 2 OCLC 38224686 Autobiography of Bertrand Russell vol 1 1967 Russell Bertrand 1972 History of Western Philosophy Touchstone p 536 ISBN 978 0 671 20158 6 Book 3 Part 1 Section 11 Bibliography editFreddoso Alfred J 1983 The Existence and Nature of God The Ontological Argument University of Notre Dame Press Gracia Jorge J E Reichberg Gregory M Schumacher Bernard N 2003 The Classics of Western Philosophy A Reader s Guide Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 0 631 23611 5 Hartshorne Charles 1962 The Logic of Perfection LaSalle Illinois Open Court Jori Alberto June 2002 Die Paradoxien des menschlichen Selbstbewusstseins und die notwendige Existenz Gottes Zu Cogitatio und Intellectus im Streit zwischen Anselm und Gaunilo In Viola C Kormos J eds Rationality from Saint Augustine to Saint Anselm Proceedings of the International Anselm Conference Piliscsaba Hungary 20 23 Piliscsaba 2005 pp 197 210 Leaman Oliver Groff Peter S 2007 Islamic Philosophy A Z Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 2089 0 Logan Ian 2009 Reading Anselm s Proslogion The History of Anselm s Argument and its Significance Today Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 6123 8 Malcolm Norman 1960 Anselm s Ontological Arguments In Hick John ed The Existence of God Problems of Philosophy Vol 69 Macmillan ISBN 978 0 02 085450 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help and in Knowledge and Certainty Essays and Lectures by Norman Malcolm Cornell University Press 1975 ISBN 0 8014 9154 1 Oppy Graham 1996 Ontological Arguments and Belief in God Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 03900 0 Plantinga Alvin ed 1965 The Ontological Argument from St Anselm to Contemporary Philosophers Garden City New York Doubleday Plantinga Alvin 1977 God Freedom and Evil Grand Rapids Michigan Eerdmans pp 85 112 ISBN 9780802817310 Plantinga Alvin 1998 Sennett James F ed The analytic theist an Alvin Plantinga reader William B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 0 8028 4229 9 Szatkowski Miroslaw ed 2012 Ontological Proofs Today Ontos Verlag ISBN 978 0 8028 4229 9 External links editOppy Graham Ontological Arguments In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Nolan Lawrence Descartes Ontological argument In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Himma Kenneth E Anselm Ontological Arguments for God s Existence Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy History of the Ontological Argument with an annotated bibliography Medieval Sourcebook Gaunilo In Behalf of the Fool and Anselm s Reply Medieval Sourcebook Philosophers Criticisms of Anselm s Ontological Argument for the Being of God Paul E Oppenheimer amp Edward N Zalta On the Logic of the Ontological Argument from James Tomberlin ed Philosophical Perspectives 5 The Philosophy of Religion Atascadero Ridgeview 1991 pp 509 529 Gregory S Neal Anselm s Ontological Argument For the Existence of God from Grace Incarnate 1990 Maciej Nowicki Anselm and Russell Logic and Logical Philosophy 2006 15 355 368 Brown Paterson Professor Malcolm on Anselm s Ontological Arguments Analysis 1961 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ontological argument amp oldid 1185602552 Anselm, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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