The argument is invalid anyway since (1) quantifies over the space of entities existentially. So (1) is equivalent to: there is a being Y such that Y = X and Y has property P, and a sub statement (there is a being Y such that Y=X) is exactly what the argument seeks to demonstrate, so it is circular. — fdrake
1. God is the greatest being imaginable [premise] — TheMadFool
Really. Why?Premise 1 is reasonable. — TheMadFool
4. If God doesn't exist then I can imagine a being greater than God (a greatest being who exists) [premise] — TheMadFool
Really. Why?
The definition in 1 is loaded by containing a hidden premise that there is an idea of a being that can be imagined that is greater than any other idea of a being that can be imagined. Why should that hidden premise be true? — andrewk
If God does not exist, then you CAN'T imagine a thing greater than god. — szardosszemagad
Predicate logic fails to capture the full content of the Ontological argument. The Ontological argument moves from existence in imagination to existence in reality. So, the TOP depends on the distinction between existence in imagination and existence in reality. This crucial distinction can't be made in predicate logic. The existential quantifier, (Ex), is restricted to reality.
In the same sense that it's reasonable to say that 'X is the greatest integer', or perhaps 'Fred is the fattest ten-foot tall man', or 'Nemo is the smallest talking fish' because they are defined as such.It's reasonable to say ''God is the greatest being imaginable'' because God is defined as such — TheMadFool
Because saying 'Define God to be the greatest imaginable being' is equivalent to the following sequence of statements:There's nothing wrong, as you say, in defining God as the ultimate being - the possessor of superlative qualities. Where is the inconsistency in this definition? — TheMadFool
1. There exists an idea X of a being such that:
a. X can be imagined by at least one human, and
b. for any Y that is an idea of a being, if Y can be imagined by at least one human, then either Y=X or X is greater than Y
2. If statement 1 is true then we label the idea X whose existence is asserted by 1, as 'God'. — andrewk
If God does not exist, then you CAN'T imagine a thing greater than god.
— szardosszemagad
If existence is ''better'' than nonexistence, then I can imagine a God that exists which would be greater than one that doesn't exist. — TheMadFool
If existence is ''better'' than nonexistence, — TheMadFool
No, because I can imagine a being greater than yours.Is that not sufficient to make 1 true? — TheMadFool
This is a condition which is not proven or supported by argument pro or con — szardosszemagad
No, because I can imagine a being greater than yours. — andrewk
If it were an attempt at a proof, this begging-the-question would be a fatal flaw. — tim wood
Of course not! If it were describable in mere human words, that would hardly be very impressive, would it?You can imagine a being greater than God, who's omnipotent, omnibenevolent and omniscient? Can you describe such a being? — TheMadFool
You can imagine a being greater than God, who's omnipotent, omnibenevolent and omniscient? Can you describe such a being? — TheMadFool
Of course not! If it were describable in mere human words, that would hardly be very impressive, would it? — andrewk
As I said before, this term "greater" is so unclear as to be vacuous. Spell out the actual properties and you'll see that your argument doesn't work. — Michael
'Better' is a subjective term anyways. — MountainDwarf
1. God is the greatest being [imaginable]
2. If God is the greatest being [imaginable] then God must exist
Therefore,
3. God must exist — TheMadFool
Well, we can come to a consensus. In fact that's what's happened with omniscience, omnibenevolence and omnipotence. — TheMadFool
No, because this morning I imagined a being that is 10% greater than the one I imagined yesterday.Surely you agree that this particular being, that which can't even be described, is the greatest being imaginable. — TheMadFool
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