I'm surprised you think criticisms of ontological arguments in general are bollocks. You actually read me as someone who believed they could summon a God into actuality through an operation of thought. — fdrake
Belief does not make things real. Imagination does not make things real.
You think reputable philosophers like Alvin Plantinga would "purposefully" word an argument in a misleading way?Yeah, and the premise is nonsense, or at least worded in a purposely misleading way. — StreetlightX
No, we're not. This is something that is involved in understanding the concept of God, so that we can say that such a concept is present in the understanding.As for the hand waving distinction between 'finite and 'infinite beings', that's just what you're trying to prove — StreetlightX
The only place where I see the word "imagine" is in your post, not in the argument. The argument merely says that something that doesn't only exist as a concept, and also exists in reality, is greater than something that only exists as a concept.But the premise is that we can imagine something greater. — Michael
Sure.So we have two different concepts: G1 and G2. — Michael
They don't (at least not existentially)! It's not in differing qua concepts that G2 is greater than G1. Plantinga doesn't claim they differ either, in fact:How do these concepts differ such that G2 is greater than G1? — Michael
The only place where I see the word "imagine" is in your post, not in the argument. The argument merely says that something that doesn't only exist as a concept, and also exists in reality, is greater than something that only exists as a concept. — Agustino
(5) From (3) and (4), a Being greater than God can be conceived.
I will come back to this later, but you really should read that paper, it addresses your concern. — Agustino
Merely repeating something does not make it true.As has been pointed out, the Ontological argument is a sophistic display of thaumaturgical witchery, whereby mere words and definitions are able to conjure concepts into existence. As Cioran writes, "God Himself lives only by the adjectives we add to him." — Maw
I know, but that article also addresses your concern.My concern isn't with existence being or not being a predicate. — Michael
My concern is with the claim that we can conceive of something greater than God if God doesn't exist (as explained here). — Michael
Call X the whole concept of God, including all possible predicates. Now subtract existence from X and call this X-e. The two concepts are existentially equivalent.What do I conceive of when I conceive of God? What do I conceive of when I conceive of this "greater" Being? If there isn't a difference then I don't conceive of something greater than God, and so the premise is false. — Michael
Call X the whole concept of God, including all possible predicates. Now subtract existence from X and call this X-e. The two concepts are existentially equivalent.
The concept of a pizza in the mind is the same as the concept found in an existing pizza (ideally). That doesn't mean that the predicate of existence does not make a difference though. Clearly the pizza in your mind is different than the pizza in reality, even though their concept is existentially the same. — Agustino
You think reputable philosophers like Alvin Plantinga would "purposefully" word an argument in a misleading way? — Agustino
Regardless of that, I don't think the argument is misleading. That a cake exists in the understanding does not tell me whether or not it (being finite) also exists in reality — Agustino
No, we're not. This is something that is involved in understanding the concept of God, so that we can say that such a concept is present in the understanding. — Agustino
The only explanation I can see for your behaviour is that you think an appropriate response to the ontological argument is immediate dismissal through ridicule with the purpose of derailing the thread into a flame war. — fdrake
The concept of a pizza in the mind is the same as the concept found in an existing pizza (ideally). That doesn't mean that the predicate of existence does not make a difference though. Clearly the pizza in your mind is different than the pizza in reality, even though their concept is existentially the same. — Agustino
This part is okay, without the ending.I'm saying that if we imagine God to be real then we can't imagine something greater than God — Michael
No, it's not false starting from the assumption of the ontological argument. You keep claiming that we imagine X and not X-e, but that's not what the argument claims.When we imagine God, we imagine X, not X-e. The ontological argument implies that we imagine X-e, and so can imagine something greater, which is false. — Michael
That Alvin Plantinga is in any way reputable is an indictment on the intelligence of our species. — StreetlightX
These statements say more about you than about Plantinga. It's okay to disagree with someone, but I don't see why you insult his intelligence. He is a reputable, published scholar, a professional philosopher with a PhD from Yale, who also studied at Harvard and other prestigious institutions. On the other hand, I'm not sure where the two of you learned philosophy.Platinga is not reputable in anyway.
He's a total nut case. — charleton
Sure, but I didn't insist. I merely quoted you saying that:Brute insistence does not a discussion make. — StreetlightX
And then explained that the existence of a cake in the understanding does not "mean precisely that the cake doesn't exist", because it could very well exist.That a cake 'exists in the understanding' means precisely that the cake doesn't exist, or rather, what exists is the 'understanding' of a cake. — StreetlightX
Your so-called "reasons" mask presuppositions that you have not bothered to make transparent.I've given reasons why the formulation is grammatically suspect, reasons which you've not addressed. — StreetlightX
For example, as if there was no connection between "the understanding of the cake" and "the cake". "The understanding of the cake", for example, exists in the cake. That is why experiencing the cake can help me form the concept of the cake in my understanding. You are adopting what looks like a form of nominalism, that entirely divorces the two, such that saying something about the one has no bearing on the other.the understanding of the cake, and not the cake, is the subject of the sentence. — StreetlightX
Sure, of course it doesn't. Neither does calling something a sophism repeatedly, saying that even a 10 year old could understand it, deriding people who hold those views, etc. make a discussion. That might be a monologue though, which helps you feel that you're right and your opponents have nothing useful to say. It kind of betrays the purpose though - if you're so confident, there's no need to deride the opposition.Brute insistence does not a discussion make. — StreetlightX
At first, you said it has everything to do with the syllogism:It also has nothing to do with the syllogism at hand, so has zero import on the argument. I will ignore any argument by you that invokes this pseudo-distinction. — StreetlightX
Now it seems you have suddenly changed gears, now it has absolutely nothing to do with the argument. So it seems to me that you're quite confused. What I said is important, because having an idea of God in the understanding is one requirement for the argument. And part of having an idea of God in the understanding involves understanding the difference between finite beings, and the infinite Being. This was part of the Hegelian criticism of Anselm, that Anselm never actually clarified the concept of God.As for the hand waving distinction between 'finite and 'infinite beings', that's just what you're trying to prove — StreetlightX
You keep claiming that we imagine X and not X-e, but that's not what the argument claims. — Agustino
No, it's not false starting from the assumption of the ontological argument.
No we don't. We just become aware that God existing in reality is greater than God (existing only in the understanding). That's not the same as imagining a non-existent thing as existing.I know that's not what the argument claims. That's the problem. The argument is wrong. We imagine God to be real, even if he isn't. — Michael
No, that's not the assumption. The assumption is that God exists in the understanding (not in reality).The assumption is "God doesn't exist". — Michael
No, it's not wrong - it actually is X-e in (1).5) implies that the bit in brackets is X-e, which is wrong. — Michael
No.1) [A being that is imagined to exist in reality ... ] exists in the understanding, but not in reality. — Michael
Yes, that comes later in the argument, where we see that if God is the being than which none greater can be imagined, then existence must also be one such property, CONTRARY to (1), which is an assumption that is later rejected in the conclusion.And what properties do we imagine a being than which none greater can be imagined to have? Is "existence in reality" one such property? Then we're imagining X, not X-e. — Michael
Yes, that comes later in the argument, where we see that if God is the being than which none greater can be imagined, then existence must also be one such property, CONTRARY to (1), which is an assumption that is later rejected in the conclusion. — Agustino
At first, you said it has everything to do with the syllogism — Agustino
For example, as if there was no connection between "the understanding of the cake" and "the cake". — Agustino
God is not the greatest conceivable being- many philosophers have argued this, many will do so in the future. — The Curiorist
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