So, a square circle is not currently a thing, because Reason forbids it from being so. But precisely because that is why it is not a thing, Reason and Reason alone has the power to make it a thing and make one. — Bartricks
No two different attributes can be the same attribute. No one thing can be two different things at the same time. No x can be not x at the same time. Nothing can sit and stand at the same time etc. These are all clear impossibilities. — Philosopher19
Existence exists everywhere. Thus, existence (or that which is omnipresent), exists necessarily, as opposed to just a hypothetical possibility. This is because existence (that which is omnipresent) encompasses and sustains all realities and worlds. Unicorns and humans don't have the same ontological necessity as the omnipresent or existence. It is that which perfectly exists that is necessarily absolutely real, whereas unicorns do not perfectly exist, so they are not necessarily absolutely real. They are not perfect beings and there is only one perfect being. That being God. — Philosopher19
So here, existing or existence is still a property (one that only applies to God). — Philosopher19
None of this applies to the OP. Both Descartes and Anselm took existing to be a good thing without justifying this move. I do no such thing. I ask what perfectly exists, and I provide the answer, and that answer is God (or a truly perfect existence). — Philosopher19
Maybe you're right about what you've said here. But to me it all sounds very much like pantheism, or at least it could apply to pantheism. I don't think, however, that you want to argue pantheistically, do you? — spirit-salamander
What do you say to the following example:
A shepherd divides his sheep according to the property of the coat color - black and white. He could separate them according to all kinds of characteristics.
But to divide his sheep according to existing and non-existing ones seems abstruse. Therefore, existence is possibly not a property. — spirit-salamander
I will read your blog post in time to understand you better. In addition, I am not a native English speaker, so the discussion is not very easy for me.
Perhaps your version of the ontological proof of God is a successful one. Then you should write a paper and have it published so that it is discussed by the scholars. — spirit-salamander
Your write like a native speaker. I could not tell that you were a non-native English speaker. — Philosopher19
I am trying to make it mainstream that the rejection of God's existence is absurd/contradictory/unreasonable. Hopefully I will succeed one day. If I do, it will be because it was perfection for me to succeed. — Philosopher19
No, I'm saying that God can make a square circle. For we suppose such things are impossible because the idea involves a contradiction. But the law of non-contradiction is a law of Reason and thus it is in her gift to change it, to allow exceptions to it, and so on. — Bartricks
for all you're going to be able to do is point out the contradictory nature of the idea in question. — Bartricks
There is no point in trying to understand what sort of a thing a square circle could be. — Bartricks
My position is that Reason is not bound by the laws of Reason. — Bartricks
Like I say, I can see no way to refute my view without simply assuming it is false for the purposes of refuting it - which is to beg the question. — Bartricks
God can do anything. And that means there are no necessary truths. — Bartricks
wish you much success with it. It is probably very difficult to establish new ideas against the spirit of the times, especially regarding proofs of God. Here is an appropriate quote from a German philosopher, which I have also translated: — spirit-salamander
I am also no exception, with me reservations, resistances and prejudices are instinctively given against proofs of God. — spirit-salamander
explain to me what the truth maker of a necessarily true proposition is. — Bartricks
they are just true - in which case the necessity of those necessary truths still needs a truthmaker — Bartricks
they are necessarily true, in which case you have not provided the truthmaker for the necessary truths either. — Bartricks
God is indeed the arbiter of truth. — Bartricks
There are no necessary truths. And you don't know what one is anyway - no one does. 2 + 2 = 4 is true so long as God asserts it to be; thus it is not necessarily true, but just true. — Bartricks
2 + 2 = 4 — Bartricks
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