the ontological argument philosophy of religion 2008 lecture 3

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The Ontological Argument Philosophy of Religion 2008 Lecture 3

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Page 1: The Ontological Argument Philosophy of Religion 2008 Lecture 3

The Ontological ArgumentThe Ontological Argument

Philosophy of Religion 2008Lecture 3

Page 2: The Ontological Argument Philosophy of Religion 2008 Lecture 3

PreliminariesPreliminaries

Procedural work – week 5 Access to online material Philosophy of religion and religious doctrine

Page 3: The Ontological Argument Philosophy of Religion 2008 Lecture 3

TodayToday

Issues regarding arguments for God’s existence Review some of the more central arguments Versions of the ontological argument:

DescartesAnselmPlantingaMillican/Nagasawa

Suggestions for further reading.

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Arguments for the existence of GodArguments for the existence of God

Not an exhaustive list Assess the arguments How to respond: are these proofs? Cumulative evidence

Page 5: The Ontological Argument Philosophy of Religion 2008 Lecture 3

Arguments for the existence of GodArguments for the existence of God

Ontological arguments Cosmological arguments Teleological (design) arguments Arguments from experience Axiological (moral) arguments … and the rest!

Page 6: The Ontological Argument Philosophy of Religion 2008 Lecture 3

Ontological argumentsOntological arguments

Arguments from the nature of God: what God is

Page 7: The Ontological Argument Philosophy of Religion 2008 Lecture 3

Descartes’ ontological argumentDescartes’ ontological argument We have the concept of God as a supremely

perfect being Existence is a perfection: a being that exists is

more perfect than a being that does not A supremely perfect being must have all

perfections Therefore God must exist

(Fifth Meditation)

Page 8: The Ontological Argument Philosophy of Religion 2008 Lecture 3

Descartes’ ontological argumentDescartes’ ontological argument

It is just as much of a contradiction to think of God (that is, a supremely perfect being) lacking existence (that is, lacking a perfection), as it is to think of a mountain without a valley

(Descartes, from Fifth Meditation, Davies Guide Chapter 32)

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Gassendi’s objectionGassendi’s objection… you compare existence with a property … surely, what does not exist has no perfections or imperfections, and what does exist and has several perfections does not have existence as one of its individual perfections; rather its existence is that in virtue of which both the thing itself and its perfections are existent, and that without which we cannot say that the thing possesses the perfections …if a thing lacks existence we do not say that it is imperfect, or deprived of a perfection, but instead that it is nothing at all.

(Gassendi, in Davies Guide Chapter 33)

Page 10: The Ontological Argument Philosophy of Religion 2008 Lecture 3

Kant’s objectionKant’s objection Existence is not a real predicate, ‘not a concept

of something that could be added to the concept of a thing’ (CPR B626)

Logical predicates and real predicates When we say ‘God is’ or ‘God exists’:

‘we attach no new predicate to the concept of God, but only posit the subject in itself with all its predicates … as being an object that stands in relation to my concept’ (CPR B627)

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Anselm’s ontological argumentAnselm’s ontological argument God is: ‘something than which nothing greater

can be conceived’ Even if someone denies God’s existence, they

possess the concept of ‘something greater than which nothing can be conceived’,

This something ’exists in their intellect’ Something that exists in reality is greater than

something that exists only in thought So if he is the greatest, God must exist in reality

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Guanilo’s ‘perfect island’Guanilo’s ‘perfect island’… they say that there is in the ocean somewhere an island which … is superior everywhere in abundance of riches to all those other lands that men inhabit. Now … I shall easily understand what is said, since nothing is difficult about it. But if he should then go on to say, as though it were a logical consequence of this: you cannot anymore doubt that this island that is more excellent than all other lands truly exists somewhere in reality than you can doubt that it is in your mind; and since it is more excellent to exist not only in the mind alone, but also in reality, therefore it must needs be that it exists [I should think he was joking, or a fool]

(Guanilo in Davies Guide Chapter 30)

Page 13: The Ontological Argument Philosophy of Religion 2008 Lecture 3

Plantinga and MalcolmPlantinga and Malcolm

Norman Malcolm: God’s existence is either impossible (since he could not be brought into existence by anything greater than himself) … or necessary (since he cannot be brought into existence, he must always have existed). Since it is not impossible that God exists, Malcolm argues that he must necessarily exist.

Page 14: The Ontological Argument Philosophy of Religion 2008 Lecture 3

Plantinga’s own argument IPlantinga’s own argument I P1: There is a possible world W in which maximal

greatness is instantiated; P2: Necessarily, a being is maximally great only if it has

maximal excellence in every world; P3: A being has maximal excellence in every world only

if it has omniscience, omnipotence and moral perfection in every world;

C1: If the possible world W existed, there would be a being that had maximal excellence (omniscience, omnipotence, moral perfection) in every world;

Page 15: The Ontological Argument Philosophy of Religion 2008 Lecture 3

Plantinga’s own argument IIPlantinga’s own argument II C1: In possible world W, there would be a being that

had maximal excellence (omniscience, omnipotence, moral perfection) in every world;

P4: In W it would be logically impossible that there is no being with maximal excellence;

P5: If something is logically impossible in one possible world then it is impossible in all possible worlds (including our own, actual world);

C2: Therefore it is impossible that a maximally excellent being does not exist in our own, actual world.

Page 16: The Ontological Argument Philosophy of Religion 2008 Lecture 3

MillicanMillican

Reformulating the claim in terms of instantiated natures overcomes most objections

The Guanilo objection: one can always create a parody case

What is the problem that this reveals? Anselm’s central idea (a-nature-than-which-no-

greater-nature-can be-thought) is ambiguous

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Millican: Anselm’s optionsMillican: Anselm’s optionsInterpretation Implications

A nature which is so great that no nature is greater

Sound, but proves only the instantiation of the greatest instantiated nature (not the existence of God)

A nature which can be thought so great that no nature can be thought greater

The nature in question may be exceeded in actual greatness

A nature which is so great that no nature can be thought greater

If no God exists, then no nature n fact is great enough. This phrase fails to denote anything.

The nature which can be thought so great that no nature is greater

Such a nature could be exceeded in actual greatness.

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ReadingReading Background - arguments for the existence of God

Quinn and Taliaferro Blackwell CompanionChapter introductions to Davies’ anthology. Clack and Clack. Jill Paton Walsh Knowledge of Angels

Ontological argument - introductoryDavies, Introduction Chapter 4 (2nd Edition) or Chapter 5 (3rd edition)Graham Oppy ‘The ontological argument’ (C&M)Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (online) ‘Ontological arguments’

More substantialNorman Malcolm, ’Anselm’s ontological arguments’ Philosophical Review 69 (1960) (also in JH).Peter Millican ‘The one fatal flaw in Anselm’s argument’ Mind 113 (2004)Yujin Nagasawa, ‘Millican on the ontological argument’ Mind 116 (2007)

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QuestionsQuestions

Does any version of the ontological argument show that there must be a maximally great, or maximally excellent, or necessary being?

If so, why? If not, why not? Would such a being be the God of theism?