Re: Christianity
Posted: Sun Jul 02, 2023 11:32 pm
The Ontological Argument Revisited
Peter Mullen explores the argument that by definition, God exists.
I'm well aware of course that there are those who actually take arguments of this sort seriously. Technical distinctions made between metaphysics, propositions and presuppositions.
But from my frame of mind, given free will, they are still only words...words thought up in order to tell us something about other words that some then conflate into the existence of God. A God, the God, their God.
And then those like Kant propose or presuppose the existence of this God in order to propose or to presuppose the intellectual/philosophical contraption that becomes deontology.
Absolutely nothing beyond the arguments themselves is there to actually demonstrate the empirical, material, phenomenological existence of a God, the God.
It's like Platonic forms. Little more than a metaphysical theory. And from this philosophical concoction comes, what, the "timeless, absolute, unchangeable idea" of God?
That is "proof" that God exists? And merely believing it need be as far as one goes?
Then straight back up "spiritually" into the clouds of abstraction...
I recall how enormously comforting and consoling my own Christian faith once was. So, sure, if only I could get it back again. But with "evidence" as thin as the ontological argument? An argument that merely defines and deduces God into existence?
And the Christian God to boot?!
Peter Mullen explores the argument that by definition, God exists.
Proposition: "a statement or assertion that expresses a judgment or opinion."R.G. Collingwood:
“Metaphysical statements are not propositions. They are presuppositions. When I say, ‘God exists’ what I mean is that I presuppose or believe that God exists. This is the metaphysical rubric. The presupposition that God exists is logically identical to the presupposition, ‘Every event has a cause.’
I'm well aware of course that there are those who actually take arguments of this sort seriously. Technical distinctions made between metaphysics, propositions and presuppositions.
But from my frame of mind, given free will, they are still only words...words thought up in order to tell us something about other words that some then conflate into the existence of God. A God, the God, their God.
And then those like Kant propose or presuppose the existence of this God in order to propose or to presuppose the intellectual/philosophical contraption that becomes deontology.
Absolutely nothing beyond the arguments themselves is there to actually demonstrate the empirical, material, phenomenological existence of a God, the God.
It's like Platonic forms. Little more than a metaphysical theory. And from this philosophical concoction comes, what, the "timeless, absolute, unchangeable idea" of God?
That is "proof" that God exists? And merely believing it need be as far as one goes?
Then straight back up "spiritually" into the clouds of abstraction...
"Here and now" I just find it hard to believe that with so much at stake on both sides of the grave, anyone could take this seriously. I can only presume that they do because if it were true how extraordinary that would be for mere mortals given our utter lack of significance given the staggering vastness of "all the there is"."What Anselm’s argument proves is not that because our idea of God is an idea of id quo maius cogitari nequit [‘of which nothing can be thought greater’], therefore God exists, but that because our idea of God is an idea of id quo maius cogitate nequit [‘that which you can’t think of as being more’], we stand [in relation] to a belief in God’s existence.”
I recall how enormously comforting and consoling my own Christian faith once was. So, sure, if only I could get it back again. But with "evidence" as thin as the ontological argument? An argument that merely defines and deduces God into existence?
And the Christian God to boot?!
Okay, so what actual proof did he have that the Christian God did in fact exist? Given that back in the eleventh century he didn't have access to YouTube videos.Most philosophers think Anselm was trying to prove the existence of God. In a sense he was, but his belief in God did not, for him, depend on the validity of his proof. His Proslogion was a prayer asking God, in whom he firmly believed, to enable him to devise an argument to prove it.



