Deductive Reasoning
A Priori
Rationalism
Existing in Re
Existing in Intellecu
Reductio Ad Absurdum
Predicate
Innate
Perfection
St. Anselm (1034CE – 31109CE)
St. Thomas Aquinas (1225CE – 1274CE)
Rene Descartes (1596CE – 1650BCE)
David Hume (1711CE – 1776CE)
Immanuel Kant (1724CE – 1804CE)
Bertrand Russell (1872CE – 1970CE)
Proslogian by St. Anselm
On Behalf of the Fool By Gaunilo
A Critique of Pure Reason By Immanual Kant
The Ontological Argument is a deductive and a priori argument for the existence of god (unlike the Cosmological & Teleological Arguments which are both inductive and a posterior arguments)
It argues that the concept of God proves that God’s existence is necessary and it is impossible for him not to exist
The original and most famous Ontological Argument is St. Anselm’s of Canterbury in his works Proslogian
▪ Anselm defined God as “that than which nothing greater can be conceived”
▪ He goes onto argue that it is greater to exist in re (in reality) than just in intellectu (in the mind)
▪ Therefore, he concludes that God exists by definition as if he did not exist then we could conceive of something greater
St. Anselm’s main principle is convincing
ANALOGY: Most people would agree that £100 in reality is better than £100 in your mind only and therefore it seems correct to say existing is reality is better
Guanilo: Pi-Land
▪ Gaunilo put forward a reduction ad absurdum argument in response to St. Anselm in which is uses the analogy of Pi-Land
ANALOGY: Gaunilo argued that we could replace the world God with the idea of a Perfect Island (or Pi-Land) and the argument would prove perfect islands exist
▪ This shows that the logic is the argument is flawed as it is clearly absurd
COUNTER-RESPONSE: However, St. Anselm responded by arguing that his argument’s logic only applied to necessary beings like Gods and not contingent objects like islands
Douglas Gasking: You can make a reverse Ontological Argument
▪ Gasking said the greatest possible achievement is the world.
▪ It would be more impressive to create a world when not existing than if you existed (as this is harder)
▪ Therefore, Gasking concludes that the world has been created by a being that doesn’t exists
▪ 500 years after St. Anselm, French philosopher Rene Descartes formulated another version of it in his Fifth Meditations
▪ Descartes argued that we have the innate idea of a supremely perfect being in our minds. However, as imperfect beings we don’t have the ability to conceive of this ourselves.
▪ Therefore, this innate idea must have originated from the supremely perfect being itself
▪ Furthermore, necessary existence is a perfection and therefore for the supremely perfect being to be perfect, they must exist
Descartes supports his argument with an analogy that makes sense
ANOLOGY: Just as you cannot think of a triangle without it having three sides, likewise you cannot imagine a supremely perfect being without it existing
Thus, Descartes concludes that existence is part of perfection
Alvin Plantinga: Modal versions of the argument support Descartes’ ideas about existence and perfection
▪ Plantinga argues that God as maximally great (instead of perfect) would be maximally great in all possible worlds
▪ Therefore, existing is part of being maximally great or perfect
Immanuel Kant: Existence is not a predicate
▪ Existence does not tell you what something is like but instead just tells you that that there is at least of it
ANALOGY: Bertrand Russell used the analogy of “Cows are brown” and “cow are brown and exist” as basically being the same sentence which shows existence is not a predicate
David Hume: You cannot define things into existence
▪ Necessary existence is an incoherent concept as existence can only be contingent
▪ Therefore, you cannot just define something as necessarily existing like the ontological argument does
Some philosophers
Psalms 14:1 'In his heart, the fool knows there is no God' ‘'[God is] .’
St. Anselm of Canterbury (Proslogion) “Now we believe that You are are something than which nothing greater can be thought.” "'if a mind could conceive of a greater being than (God) the creature would rise above the Creator; and this is most absurd.''.
Gaunilo of Marmoutiers “, the idea that the perfect island has to exist just by virtue of being the perfect island is absurd; "
St Thomas Aquinas"...Now because we don't know the essence of God, the proposition is not self-evident to us; but needs to be demonstrated by things that are more known to us." in his Summa Theologica I.II question 1 (1264)
Descartes (Triangle) 'Existence can no more be separated from the essence of God than the fact its three angles equal to two right angles can be separated from the essence of a triangle.'
Kant concluded that the argument was “so much labour and effort lost” as "Existence is not a predicate" - '
Bertrand Russell "Existence is not a predicate and does not describe the properties of an object, it just informs me whether there is such an object in the real world ... Existence cannot be a predicate otherwise we could argue santa's existence"
David Hume 'We cannot define something into existence - even if it has all the perfections we can imagine.'
Malcolm (Necessary or Impossible) 'Thus God's existence is either impossible or necessary. It can be the former only if the concept of such a being is self-contradictory or in some way logically absurd.'
Alvin Plantinga "Guanilo's island "contains no intrinsic maximum" "The quantities that make for the greatness of an island...most of these qualities have no intrinsic maximum...for the idea of a greatest possible island is an inconsistent or incoherent idea; it's not even possible that there be such a thing." "The greatest possible being must have maximal excellence in every possible world"
Hick - 'Even if the concept of an eternal being is entirely free from contradiction, it in no way follows that there must be such a thing.' He argues If heaven is real when we die that that is what proves God exists.
Swinburne "Somethings do exist or necessity e.g. A. Number greater than 10"
Richard Dawkins "'(The fact that the) grand conclusion (that God exists) could follow from such a logo-machist trickery offends me aesthetically.' "lacks a single piece of data from the real world" "infantile"
Section A
Examine key ideas of the ontological argument for the existence of God.
Assess the strengths of the modal ontological argument from for the existence of God.
Section B
3a Clarify the ideas illustrated in this passage about the nature of necessity.
3b Analyse the implications for the ontological argument.
Section C
4. Evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of the ontological argument for the existence of God.
Psalms 14:1 'In his heart, the fool knows there is no God' ‘'[God is] .’
St. Anselm of Canterbury (Proslogion) “Now we believe that You are are something than which nothing greater can be thought.” "'if a mind could conceive of a greater being than (God) the creature would rise above the Creator; and this is most absurd.''.
Gaunilo of Marmoutiers “, the idea that the perfect island has to exist just by virtue of being the perfect island is absurd; nobody is going to book a ticket to go there on the basis of an argument like that. 'If a man should try to prove to me by such reasoning that this island truly exists ... either I should believe that he was jesting, or I know not which I ought to regard as the greater fool.' “You cannot doubt that this island that is more excellent than any other lands truly exists...” "Of God or a being greater than all others, I could not conceive at all, except merely according to the word. An object can hardly or never be conceived according to the word alone."
St Thomas Aquinas "'God exists' of itself is self-evident, for the predicate is the same of the subject, because God is His own existence as will hereafter shown...Now because we don't know the essence of God, the proposition is not self-evident to us; but needs to be demonstrated by things that are more known to us." in his Summa Theologica I.II question 1 (1264) he dismissed the Ontological Argument because it is to suggest that any human being can have an idea “of God, to use Descartes phrase from the Meditations, sufficient to analyse that idea and find necessary existence – a unique property of God." i.e. Humans cannot understand god's nature therefore God exists cannot be analytical
Descartes (Triangle) 'Existence can no more be separated from the essence of God than the fact its three angles equal to two right angles can be separated from the essence of a triangle.' 'It would be self-contradictory to posit a triangle and yet reject its three angles, but there is no contradiction in rejecting the triangle with its three angles.' "the relation between existence and essence is manifestly quite different in the case of God and in the case of the triangle."
Descartes (Shape) 'the idea of God ... is one which I find within me as surely as the idea of any shape of number.'
Kant concluded that the argument was “so much labour and effort lost” as "Existence is not a predicate" - 'If we take the subject with all its predicates and say 'God is' or 'There is a God', we attach no new predicate to the concept of God' “To posit a triangle, and yet to reject its three angles, is self-contradictory; but there is no contradiction in rejecting the triangle together with its three angles.” ...a determining predicate is a predicate which is added to the concept of the subject and enlarges it.” “…’being’ is obviously not a real predicate.”
Bertrand Russell "Existence is not a predicate and does not describe the properties of an object, it just informs me whether there is such an object in the real world" developing this point, he uses the example of the claim “the present King of France is bald”. "Anselm uses word exist incorrectly. Existence cannot be a predicate otherwise we could argue santa's existence"
David Hume 'We cannot define something into existence - even if it has all the perfections we can imagine.' "All our ideas, derived from the senses, are confessedly false and illusive; and cannot, therefore, be supposed to have a place in supreme intelligence."
Malcolm (Necessary or Impossible) 'Thus God's existence is either impossible or necessary. It can be the former only if the concept of such a being is self-contradictory or in some way logically absurd.' i.e Necessary existence cannot be brought about or taken away, so for God not to exist is logically absurd. His existence is not impossible nor can it be brought about or ceased to exist.
Alvin Plantinga "Guanilo's island "contains no intrinsic maximum" "The quantities that make for the greatness of an island...most of these qualities have no intrinsic maximum...for the idea of a greatest possible island is an inconsistent or incoherent idea; it's not even possible that there be such a thing." "The greatest possible being must have maximal excellence in every possible world"
Hick - 'Even if the concept of an eternal being is entirely free from contradiction, it in no way follows that there must be such a thing.' He argues If heaven is real when we die that that is what proves God exists.
Swinburne "Somethings do exist or necessity e.g. A. Number greater than 10"
Richard Dawkins "'(The fact that the) grand conclusion (that God exists) could follow from such a logo-machist trickery offends me aesthetically.' "lacks a single piece of data from the real world" "infantile"
Bian Davies 'A non-existent book is not different from a real book. Nor is it similar. It is just not there to be similar or different to anything.'
Cole 'Whatever one believes about God, it seems reasonable to say that nothing can be thought of to be greater than God.' “According to Gaunilo, if Anselm is correct then it is not only God’s existence that can be established by reasoning akin to Anselm’s.”
Gareth Moore- No one claims the equator does not exist, gods reality is as real for the believers as the equator
Tyler and Reid - 'Despite strong attacks over the years, the ontological argument has continued to be popular for proving the existence of God.' 'How can we make claims about the infinite eternal ... God of classical theism in the basis of limited human reasoning and logic?'
Vardy 'If God is by definition something supremely perfect and if existence is a perfection, it follows God, by definition exists and that to deny that this is so is to contradict oneself.'
Michael Palmer used another example to explain this; that of two candidates applying for a job. If a panel is faced with two CVs listing the “perfections” of the candidate A and candidate B, it would be ridiculous to list “exists” as one of them – existence is neither a perfection nor properly used as a predicate, rather it is what makes the analysis of the CV and the contest between the candidates meaningful.
John Mackie ' "The Characterisations of God are meaningless"
Charles Hartshone "the conceptual description of a kind of thing may at most account for so much of its quality or value as is expressible in merely abstract terms. But the full quality is not thus expressible."