Anselm's argument
pretty old, but I thought I would throw it to the dogs. What is wrong with this then?
1) A being is God if and only if it is the greatest conceivable being. 2) Let's assume that atheism is correct, and that God only exists in thought, and not reality. 3) That which exists in both reality and thought is greater than existence in thought alone. 4) We can conceive of God's existence in both thought and reality. 5) Thus, we can conceive of a being greater than God. 6) We can conceive of a being greater than the greatest conceivable being. 7) The assumption that God only exists in thought leads to a contradiction, so it must be false. |
Re: Anselm's argument
I dislike point 3 :(
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Re: Anselm's argument
oh and using that logic there must exist a perfect place, a perfect woman, a perfect spoon, etc
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Re: Anselm's argument
I never find anything like that particularly satisfying. It's what happens when Mathematicians hang around with philosophers too long.
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personally I like to define the greatest being as a being that can concieve a greater being than itself.
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Point 5 is bollocks if you're keeping point 1 in mind. Plus point 3 appears to have been plucked out of the air.
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Re: Anselm's argument
Just because you can conceive of something great doesn't mean that it actually exists.
A 12 year old could come up with a better argument than that for why God exists. |
Re: Anselm's argument
2) seems like an abuse of language, with a pretty horrible use of the word 'exist', 3) is meaningless, 4) is probably wrong, and in any case you cant 'logically' prove that something does or doesnt exist (lol zeno lol)
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Re: Anselm's argument
It's not called "Radical Edward's Argument", ffs.
Having said that, I was under the impression that the need for god was to fill the void left by a lack of inclination to apply logic to problems; so I find the use of logic to prove god exists to be somewhat perverse. |
Re: Anselm's argument
Ooh, JonnyBGood said he understands this sort of thing!
And yeah they aren't meant to be persuasive as such. But they are fairly sound in that specific refutations are generally even less persuasive. http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/on...l-arguments/#8 I'd go for #2 for the reasons idi and nod said. Things don't exist in thought; at most, models of them do. |
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Anyways the whole thing just falls down so fast. What you're conceiving of as god isn't actually god, it's just an appearance, as in what you concieve god to be. It's a platonic raping of language. |
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Though variants on "idealism is gay" are hard arguments to sustain logically. |
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If god can create it all and do everything, than can it make a rock so heavy that he cant lift?
See? Much faster and simpler. |
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Oh my god we're not doing that one again. Let's put it this way, if god operates outside the universe, and time, does your question still make sense?
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Re: Anselm's argument
Maybe I'm missing something, but I can't see anything in that arguement that isn't a hole.
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Re: Anselm's argument
dont know about the rest, but in the case of number 2, it means that God only exists in the thoughts of its believers, not in reality. and if you keep that in mind then at least that point makes a little more sense.
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