How many times and in how many ways must it be said that God is being itself? How many links and book recommendations must be posted before you show the slightest bit of curiosity in finding out the slightest bit about classical theism? How about addressing my post? Are you that committed to sound and fury with no substance? What part of "God is "the light of being itself", the answer to the question of why there's existence to begin with" don't you understand?
One article I've linked to on several occasions says that one on the best arguments for atheism goes like this:
I've seen the argument used in this forum. But the article goes on to say, and rightly so:Maybe we do need to posit an ultimate First Cause of sorts. But whether we do or not, there's nothing to be gained by saying it's a supernatural entity with intellect and will. No hitherto unexplained facts get explained, and no currently explained facts get explained any better. All we end up doing is making explanatorily superfluous claims. This is what LaPlace had in mind when he said, in reference to God, “I have no need of that hypothesis.”
The argument posed above, in case you don't understand the rejoinder, is begging the question, since it assumes that the First Cause could be composite, which entails that Divine Simplicity (a central tenant of classical theism) is false. Your "arguments" are no different; they are based on wilful ignorance. You embrace an ultimate absurdity and posit no argument in its support. You complain that Bentley "does not elaborate what he means when he says "what is logically entailed in denying that there is any God so defined"" without paying the slightest heed to his writings. Why? Shouldn't you take it upon yourself to know what you're talking about? to have some understanding of traditional (classical) monotheism? It's been around for centuries, after all. What's your excuse? It is your responsibility to know what you are talking about.This response would have considerable force against modern conceptions of God, under which God might be viewed as a sort of conjunction of essential properties: God is necessary and omnipotent and the source of all value, etc. Here one is entitled to reject the entire conjunction simply by virtue of rejecting one of its conjuncts. So while a non-theist might not think that anything has all of these properties, she might think that something has a couple or more of them.
But, this way of thinking is incoherent on classical theism, since the First Cause is considered to be utterly simple. In other words, the First Cause isn't thought of as having essential properties, or any sort of parts at all: the First Cause and its power, goodness, and even knowledge all refer to the same thing, just in different senses (much like "Clark Kent" and "Superman" do).
Right. You said it yourself: you don't "do philosophy."