Fair enough, then it's a question whether Leibniz is right or whether Aquinas is right (given some assumptions)."But the order of things is the best it can be, since the power of the first cause does not fail the potency in things for perfection." — Gregory
Why is it suspect? — Amalac
Fair enough, then it's a question whether Leibniz is right or whether Aquinas is right (given some assumptions).
I'm open to both possibilities. What reasons does Aquinas give for accepting that? You can just tell me where you got the quote if you don't want to put it here. — Amalac
you have not given a reason to think we can turn all our ideas of good into a single subject. — Gregory
The argument you used in the OP to "prove" this subject exists is just a "bait and switch" linguistic tactic and it's not going to fool people who read philosophy — Gregory
You're version of it is not stronger than Anselm's or Descartes or Malebranches's or Leibniz's. You just choose a different way to try to trip up the reader, AND I don't say this to put you down but just to be objective. You obviously like these kinds of ideas/arguments and I do to. But again they say much about the mind but say nothing about what is outside the mind. — Gregory
You say (1) we have the idea of perfection. — Gregory
(2) existence is a perfection "which would imply that it would not only exist as an idea in the mind, but also outside the mind. Let us assume that the subject of all perfections does not exist: then non-existence is a perfection, and in the subject of said perfection said attribute must be expressed without any limits, which would imply that not only does it not exist outside of the mind, but neither does it exist as an idea in the mind. Therefore God does not exist as an idea in the mind. But God does exist as an idea in the mind" — Gregory
Youre just playing with logic. We can think that we have an idea of perfection. But again, does that idea have a consistent form in our minds and does it accord with something outside our minds? You don't have the crucial form of an argument because you use a linguistic trick. You haven't laid out a clear argument really for anything — Gregory
As a human being, the only kind of thinking I can have both an idea of, and a direct personal experience of, in the first person, present tense mode, is a kind of thinking that is open to the possibility of complete cessation and non-existence. — charles ferraro
But logical thinking, which is human after all, cannot enable me to have also a direct personal experience of this kind of necessary thinking, in the first person, present tense mode. — charles ferraro
The point being that your argument is false precisely because you do not recognize that it must depend upon that experience in order to be true. — charles ferraro
And how do you that it has a limit that makes the argument invalid?Logical thinking is not divine. Logical thinking has its limits, and this is one of them. — charles ferraro
I am not pretending to know God's essence. What I am speculating about is one way in which divine thinking might differ from human thinking, if the divine existed, by extending certain basic principles derived from Descartes' epistemology. — charles ferraro
If, on the other hand, you mean that God's existence cannot be proven a priori because we do not know God's essence (like Aquinas maintained) it is not enough to say that that is so, if you want your position to be convincing. Tell us how you know that we DO NOT know God's essence. — Amalac
But Divine thinking is the idea of an: "While I think necessarily, I exist necessarily," which idea I cannot experience in the first person, present tense mode
"If existence and non-existence are predicates, then either existence is a perfection or non-existence is a perfection."
Existence is a perfection — Gregory
"1. Either nonexistence is a mark of greatness OR Existence is a mark of greatness [premise]"
Existence us — Gregory
"Let us assume that the subject of all perfections does not exist: then non-existence is a perfection, and in the subject of said perfection said attribute must be expressed without any limits, which would imply that not only does it not exist outside of the mind, but neither does it exist as an idea in the mind."
FALSE. It exists only in the mind so far — Gregory
3. If nonexistence is a mark of greatness then the greatest being cannot exist in any way possible [premise]"
Yes — Gregory
"Therefore God does not exist as an idea in the mind."
FALSE. It exists only in the mind so far — Gregory
"But God does exist as an idea in the mind, therefore the assumption that the subject of all perfections has the perfection of not-existing led us to a contradiction."
NO. The idea that it exists as perfection exists in the mind but there is no argument so far that absolute perfection must exist — Gregory
"And therefore this assumption must be false. From which it follows that God has the perfection of existing, that is: He exists."
So why are you now retracting and saying you are no talking about God. — Gregory
"This also answers the objection that not-existing might be better than existing, and that therefore non existence might be a perfection."
(...)Non-existence of a good is not a perfection (...). — Gregory
"4. The greatest being cannot exist in any way possible [2, 3, Modus ponens]"
Outside our thoughts, yes — Gregory
"7. If God cannot exist in any way possible then God cannot exist as an idea"
THERE is the problem. You go from saying God can't exist in any way is non-existence is a perfection. God exists in our thoughts and the thought is that his existence is a perfection. HOWEVER, it does not prove he is outside our thoughts to say we have the thought of him existing even is non-existence cannot be a predicate — Gregory
You go from saying God can't exist in any way is non-existence is a perfection.
God exists in our thoughts and the thought is that his existence is a perfection.
It does if you accept that the disjunctions are true, and if you accept the definitions.it does not prove he is outside our thoughts to say we have the thought of him existing even is non-existence cannot be a predicate
"12. Existence is a mark of greatness [1, 11 Disjunctive syllogism]"
Obviously
"13. If existence is a mark of greatness then the greatest being must exist [premise]"
FALSE — Gregory
But Divine thinking is the idea of an: "While I think necessarily, I exist necessarily," which idea I cannot experience in the first person, present tense mode. — charles ferraro
1. The occurrence of my personal thinking along with the simultaneous occurrence of my personal existing are open to the possibility of complete cessation and non-existence. In this sense they are both contingent. — charles ferraro
2. No one knows why the occurrence of my personal thinking and the occurrence of my personal existing are open to the possibility of complete cessation and non-existence; i.e., are contingent. They just are. — charles ferraro
3. I am "only open to this kind of thinking;" viz.; contingent thinking, because I cannot engage in any other kind of thinking. All my thinking is contingent. If I could engage in necessary thinking, which I cannot, I would be divine, because my existence would also be necessary. — charles ferraro
The reason Thomists were opposed to the (ontological) argument was that it seemed to endow our fallible intellect with too much power: we can, in fact, conceive of God as non-existent, the Thomists say, not because his existence is not really included in his essence, but because of the weakness of our reason; In short, we are so mentally weak that we can be atheists. It might be suspected, although St. Thomas did not say it in these terms, that St. Anselm's reasoning exhibited a certain hubris, an unacceptable confidence in the skill of philosophy; In Thomist terms, the only path that leads to God and that is within the reach of natural lights (that is, apart from revelation and the rare gift of mystical union) begins with the imperfection and non-self-sufficiency of creatures and not by our knowledge of the nature of God.
It might even be appropriate to say that for thomists the ontological argument is valid, but that only God can understand its validity (which, however, seems to lead us to an antinomy, just like a statement of the form 'A is valid but only God can know why "implies" I know that A is valid, but I cannot know that it is. "Thus, the content of the sentence would be negated by expressing it, in a way not very different from what would happen if we said:" I am unable to say a single word in English "or" I'm mute ").
I'm not trying to PROVE the existence of anything! You are! — charles ferraro
All I'm saying is that the occurrence of NECESSARY thinking and existing cannot be EXPERIENCED by a human being in the first person, present tense mode. — charles ferraro
Ontological arguments claim that necessary thinking and existing can also be experienced by human beings, in the first person, present tense mode. — charles ferraro
If not necessary thinking and necessary existing, then what would an ontological argument argue for? — charles ferraro
I do think your use of the word "strange" conveys an unwarranted negative value judgment — charles ferraro
Experience = whatever I can encounter. I can encounter objects as objects. I can encounter my consciousness (thinking) as an object. I can encounter my consciousness (my thinking) as a subject.
But, I cannot encounter the other's consciousness (the other's thinking) as a subject. — charles ferraro
your use of the term "the subject of all perfections" reminds me of the term "the great wizard of Oz." I think my ability to experience your "subject of all perfections" (by the way, how do you define a subject and perfections?) is less likely than my ability to experience "the great wizard of Oz." — charles ferraro
So, let me see if I understand correctly. I must believe that some, or all, ontological arguments are capable of convincing me of the truth of the idea that a purported subject of all perfections exists necessarily, but I can't verify the truth of this idea empirically because I can't have a personal experience of it's perfect thinking and its perfect existing in the first person, present tense mode. — charles ferraro
You still need to argue that existence or non existence are perfections, after all, maybe there are no perfections at all, or maybe perfection is inapplicable to either existence or non existence. — jkg20
You have the idea of God and the idea that existence is perfection. — Gregory
Because you have a thought of God, does it have to correspond to what it represents? — Gregory
you are (im sad to say) presenting muddle in order for people to have faith in your logic. — Gregory
It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.
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