And if we have estimated and considered that the triangle is perfect, then we ourselves are God. — SimpleUser
Suppose I express my idea of a blue apple by painting a picture of five blue apples. I point my finger at it and say, "This represents five blue apples." If later I discover that blue apples really exist, I can still point to the same picture and say, "This represents five real blue apples." And if I can't discover the existence of the blue apples, I can point to the painting and say, "This represents five imaginary blue apples." In all three cases the picture is the same. The concept of five real apples does not contain one more apple than the concept of five possible apples. The idea of a unicorn will not get more horns just because unicorns exist in reality. In Kant's terminology, one does not add any new properties to a concept by expressing the belief that the concept corresponds to a real object external to one's mind. — Martin Gardner
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. — Wikipedia
B) Whatever's perfectly existing, is indubitably existing — Philosopher19
Not quite. What you get is a thinking being exists. That thinking being only becomes Bartricks when Descartes argues that God would not deceive. And from that, therefore, you can recover Barticks so long as you were quite sure you were Bartricks. That is, not just from the "I think therefore I am."From the idea of your self you can conclude that you exist. — Bartricks
Not quite. What you get is a thinking being exists. — tim wood
First, if it works it does not show that the ontological argument for God does not work, it just establishes the devil's existence as well. — Bartricks
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 no devil corollary is a strong challenge, as it "underwrites" the no devil corollary, which "threatens Anselm's argument at its very foundations".
— Wikipedia
But an omnipotent and omniscient being will also be omnibenevolent — Bartricks
No, the point is that it's challenging the idea that it is better to exist than not to exist, since we naturally think that such a devil would be worse if it existed. — Amalac
But an omnipotent and omniscient being will also be omnibenevolent
— Bartricks
How do you know that? Can you prove this claim? — Amalac
Well said. There's an odd sort of self-deception needed to accept such arguments. — Banno
There is also the devil corollary: — Amalac
But it does not follow that a perfect being is omnipotent, omniscient — Bartricks
It is better to be the real God than to exist as just an illusion/image of God (the real God is better than all humans or image/imaginary/pretend gods). We are meaningfully/semantically aware that something perfectly/indubitably exists — Philosopher19
The most effective refutation of such kinds of ontological arguments that I know of is the one invented by Kant: existence is not a predicate, or if you prefer Frege: existence is a second order predicate.
If that is true, then it makes no sense to think of existence as a “quality which is better to have”:
Suppose I express my idea of a blue apple by painting a picture of five blue apples. I point my finger at it and say, "This represents five blue apples." If later I discover that blue apples really exist, I can still point to the same picture and say, "This represents five real blue apples." And if I can't discover the existence of the blue apples, I can point to the painting and say, "This represents five imaginary blue apples." In all three cases the picture is the same. The concept of five real apples does not contain one more apple than the concept of five possible apples. The idea of a unicorn will not get more horns just because unicorns exist in reality. In Kant's terminology, one does not add any new properties to a concept by expressing the belief that the concept corresponds to a real object external to one's mind.
— Martin Gardner
Here is a (short) explanation of Frege's criticism — Amalac
See my other post you ignored here: — Amalac
Well, no, I don't believe there exists something better than god, nor there exists a god, for that matter.If you think there is/exists something better than God or a truly perfect existence, — Philosopher19
Just as we cannot reject three-sidedness as being a semantical component of triangle, we cannot reject existence and realness as being semantical components of God — Philosopher19
One just has to be sincere to the semantics that they are aware of without bias and prejudice... — Philosopher19
Do you think it's better to be in a truly perfect existence or not?
Do you think it's better to be God or not? — Philosopher19
B) Whatever's perfectly existing, is indubitably existing (just as whatever's perfectly triangular, is indubitably triangular). — Philosopher19
It's the treating existence as a predicate that gets me; saying something exists is not like saying it has three sides. That's why existential quantifiers are not first-order predicates. — Banno
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