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ontological argument
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ontological argument

One of four traditional lines of reasoning to support the existence of God. Crudely, the argument is that God has all perfections; existence is a perfection, so God exists necessarily. The argument dates back to the 11th-century scholar St Anselm.

In various forms, the ontological argument has been used by René Descartes, Gottfried Leibniz, and Baruch Spinoza, and by several 20th-century philosophers. In the 18th century Immanuel Kant criticized the argument, saying that being or existence is not a property or predicate. The other three traditional arguments are the argument from design, the cosmological argument, and the moral argument.



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Next we are treated to the ontological argument of Anselm of Canterbury that God is "that which no greater can be thought.
Among the topics are a second look at the evidential argument from evil, the problem of divine perfection and freedom, modal versions of the ontological argument, and Dewey and Wieman on religion within the bounds of naturalism.
This is particularly true of "On the Threshold," in which the grounds for Nancy's consideration of the origins of art in cave painting are once more mapped in the form of the ontological argument.
 
 
 
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