Ontological argument Flashcards

1
Q

who wrote the Ontological argument

A

Anslem

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2
Q

what type of argument is the Ontological argument

A

A priori, deductive argument which claims to demonstrate that the statement God exists is analytically true - meaning it would be nonsense or incoherent to doubt God’s existence

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3
Q

what is ontology

A

the nature of being

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4
Q

what does the Ontological argument claim

A

once you have understood the meaning of the word God, e.g. the nature of God’s being, you must recognise that God exists. But so the argument is dependent on one’s understanding of the nature of God

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5
Q

how did Anselm define God for the Ontological argument

A

as that than which nothing greater can be conceived

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6
Q

if God is that than which nothing greater can be conceived why does that mean he exists? (O)

A

because £1000 in mind isn’t as great as £10 in reality as it has the extra quality of existence and if he didn’t exist then the he wouldn’t be the greatest conceivable being

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7
Q

what does Anselm’s ontological argument depends on

A

ones understanding of the nature of God and their belief in his definition of God and the assumption that existence in the mind and reality is greater than existence in the mind alone

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8
Q

discuss existence as a predicate of God in the Ontological argument

A
  • intrinsic property or quality of something
  • predicate of a rose species might be its form or fragrance
  • tells us something about the nature of a thing
  • predicate of a widow is that husband has died, it is the nature of being a widow so you don’t have to specify the quality
  • Anslem claims it is part of God’s nature that he exists
  • God has to exist as a an idea in mind not as great as reality as doesn’t have intrinsic property of existence and thus god wouldn’t be greatest conceivable being
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9
Q

in the second version of the Ontological argument what point does Anselm add

A

it is impossible for this being, God, not to exist, ‘this being’ has to exist. If you say God doesn’t exist you are contradicting yourself because it is a part of his nature as the greatest possible being to exist.

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10
Q

discuss God’s existence as necessary in the ontological argument

A
  • two modes of existence: contingent and necessary
  • because of the way the notion of God is properly defined, it thus follows that God must be conceived as having necessary existence as the divine mode of being. The argument concludes what has necessary existence must necessarily existence and therefore God exists.
  • stops the infinite chain of causation
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11
Q

what is the difference between contingent and necessary existence

A

contingent:
- belongs to an object that happens to exist but whose non-existence is equally conceivable e.g. a flower

necessary:

  • cannot not exist, must exist at all times
  • it is self-contradictory to think of such an object coming into existence or being caused by anything other than itself and equally self-contradictory to think of it being destroyed by anything other than itself or simply ceasing to be
  • superior to contingent
  • stops the infinite chain of causation
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12
Q

who criticizes Anselm and it what

A
  • Gaunilo in his argument on behalf of the fool

- Kant

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13
Q

what three criticisms did Gaunilo give

A
  • Gossip
  • Defining things into existence
  • The perfect island
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14
Q

discuss Gaunilo’s criticism of gossip and defining things into existence

A

Gossip: the fool could have in mind all sorts of things that don’t exist in reality. People hear things from gossip but is unreliable as the person and question in event may have been made up to trick you

Defining things into existence: you cannot demonstrate the existence of something by just having an idea about it

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15
Q

discuss Gaunilo’s criticism of the perfect island

A
  • you cannot doubt this island actually exists somewhere in reality because it exists in your understanding and as it is the best it must necessarily exist in reality
  • your proving its existence with no certainty and your a fool to accept it
  • whilst the most perfect island can be conceived of it doesn’t mean it exists
  • it is illogical and the argument is a joke
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16
Q

what was Anselm’s response to Gaunilo’s perfect island criticism

A
  • God’s existence is necessary the island’s is not and it has contingent existence
  • the island doesn’t have to exist but god does as his definition is the greatest conceivable being
  • Anselm argued against Gaunilo that if you conceive of the greatest possible being you conceive of a being which cannot be conceived not to exist
  • Gaunilo’s island is not a thing which cannot be conceived not to exist
17
Q

what was Alvin Plantinga’s response to Gaunilo’s criticisms

A
  • suggested that Anselm could also reply by suggesting however great and island is there could always be a better one as there is no intrinsic maximum to the quantity of things the island can have
  • but on the other hand god is maximally great in Anselm’s thought therefore greatest island/being not comparable
  • god not thought of as the greatest but the greatest thing that can be thought of
18
Q

what were the criticisms of Kant

A
  • it’s impossible for humans to fruitfully engage in questions about existence/nature of God
  • any idea we have about God is just that an idea
  • humans have never experienced the totality of God and therefore can only offer speculative ideas that aren’t based on experience
19
Q

what does Kant claim

A
  • that a statement like God exists is a synthetic statement because God’s existence is not a logical truth
  • he also adds existence is not a predicate meaning saying X exists doesn’t actually tell us anything about X
  • when we say there is a God we don’t attach a new predicate to the idea of God
  • existence is not an extra quality
20
Q

what other objections are there to the Ontological argument

A
  • nature of god is mysterious we don’t have an idea of him only a verbal symbol, the word God
  • the term god doesn’t denote a conceivable thing
  • relies on our concept of God as a starting point for deductive argument !!!
21
Q

what does Aquinas say about the Ontological argument and how would Anselm respond

A
  • rejects claims that the existence of God is self-evident to humans
  • humans are not in a position to understand God’s nature and hence cannot know God exists is an analytic statement
  • Aquinas prefers teleo or cosmo as they are synthetic that look for evidence to prove God’s existence
  • anselm would argue that proof does not require a complete understanding of God but only that whatever else god may be there is no such greater being that can be conceived
  • even the fool must admit this before refusal to believe