Philosopher19
What do you mean by “perfectly existing”? — Amalac
Banno
Amalac
To be an imaginary human, is to exist an imaginary human? — Philosopher19
To be a human on planet earth, it to exist as a human on planet earth? — Philosopher19
Do you agree that to be imperfect as a triangle, is to exist imperfectly as a triangle? — Philosopher19
Do you agree that to be imperfect as a being/existent, is to exist imperfectly as a being/existent? — Philosopher19
Note that you cannot say to be a square-circle, is to exist as a square-circle. Such a thing is impossible. Absurdities and contradictions exist, but what they describe (round squares) does not. By definition that which is contradictory is absurd or not true of existence. — Philosopher19
Perfection = that which is perfect. The perfect being. That which perfectly exists. — Philosopher19
Banno
Yes, and I believe I addressed it. — Philosopher19
...which seems to me to conflate the first order "triangles have three sides " with the second order "triangles exist".Triangularity and existence/being/existing are both meaningful, and I believe I have been sincere to those semantics. — Philosopher19
Philosopher19
in that case I'd say a human that is merely imagined has being, but does not exist. — Amalac
Once again, if you are following Meinong, all you are saying is that unicorns have being but don't have existence, since they only exist in the mind, whereas I have existence since I exist both as an idea in the mind and also outside the mind. — Amalac
Philosopher19
...which seems to me to conflate the first order "triangles have three sides " with the second order "triangles exist". — Banno
Amalac
How is that not contradictory? — Philosopher19
Does a Sherlock Holmes at least exist as a character (perhaps in a story)? Yes. — Philosopher19
If we take the absolute approach (no degrees), then no, you don't have existence. — Philosopher19
Descartes' I think therefore I am established that something indubitably exists. — Philosopher19
But only God cannot be any more complete/perfect as a being. — Philosopher19
No, you are now equivocating “is” as a copula and “is” as a synonym of “exists”. — Amalac
Banno
To say "existence is not a predicate" is to say what is contradictory. — Philosopher19
The concept of "round-square" is absurd. Why is it absurd? Because round-squares do not exist... — Philosopher19
Amalac
Philosopher19
There's nothing contradictory about it (though the way Meinong expressed his ideas is peculiar) — Amalac
What we are interested in here is existence outside the mind, right? — Amalac
If we use Meinong's terminology, then yes, I do have existence. If you are not using that terminology, then clearly you are assuming here that existence is a predicate (“I have/ don't have existence”) and can therefore be refuted by Kant's objection. — Amalac
Philosopher19
SO things are absurd because they do not exist? But that's not right, since three-dollar notes do not exist, but are surely not absurd. — Banno
That way we can have things that are not contradictions but nevertheless do not exist. — Banno
Banno
Three dollar notes exist — Philosopher19
If x is not omnipotent and omnipresent, then x is not a perfect being (or perfectly existing), because better being/existents than it can be conceived of. — Philosopher19
Only one thing is truly existing — Philosopher19
Bartricks
Philosopher19
Perhaps you meant that they are possible.
But you haven't addressed the criticism from Kant, you've gone off on a tangent instead. Your notion of existence is at odds with the whole of mathematical logic. — Banno
Philosopher19
There may be a view that being omniscient and/or omnipotent is not a feature of the perfect being. — god must be atheist
Where did you get that? It's simply not true. You certainly exist; I certainly exist; we are one and the same? Then how come we disagree? — god must be atheist
Philosopher19
God does not have to be perfect. — Bartricks
Bartricks
Philosopher19
If x is not omnipotent and omniscient, then x is not truly free. Nor is he able to ensure that everyone gets what they truly deserve. — Philosopher19
Bartricks
Omnipotence = being able to do all that is doable — Philosopher19
If x is not omnipotent and omniscient, then x is not truly free. Nor is he able to ensure that everyone gets what they truly deserve. If x is not omnipotence and omniscient, then a truly perfect existence is impossible. — Philosopher19
Philosopher19
Yet in your definition perfection is that which is the greatest. Well, given two or more equally great systems, neither or none of them are greater than the others. — god must be atheist
Philosopher19
You are confused. You do not understand omnipotence and thus do not grasp the concept of God.
God can do anything. A being who can create himself is more powerful than one who can't. So you are profoundly confused if you identify omnipotence with the latter and not the former. — Bartricks
Philosopher19
Is it doable to move any amount of weight? Yes.
Is it doable to create a weight that is so heavy that it's not movable? Yes. — god must be atheist
Bartricks
You cannot have more than one perfect being because you cannot have more than one omnipresent being. — Philosopher19
Omnipotence = being able to do all that is doable (completely perfect/absolute power/freedom). — Philosopher19
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