RE: Why "mysterious ways" don't matter.
July 8, 2014 at 7:37 pm
(This post was last modified: July 8, 2014 at 7:40 pm by The Grand Nudger.)
Quote:"The greatest conceivable being" definition is not nonsensical. St. Anselm, a philosopher, called the founder of scholasticism, and the Archbishop of Canterbury came up with that definition in the 11th century and it has been discussed by philosophers ever since. You don't think it is objectively better to be morally perfect than morally flawed? I believe it is good argument and serves to at least further the case that God is good.Again, in case you missed it, "the greatest possible being", which I would propose...claims all attributes and actions of your god for it's own...and accomplishes all of it while being non existent.
Talk about great...amiright? Not nonsensical in the least, eh? -St. Anselm was a moron with a pen.
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