RE: The Ontological Argument - valid or debunked?
June 22, 2016 at 2:07 pm
(June 19, 2016 at 9:45 am)SteveII Wrote:
The argument can be summed up as: If you think that it is broadly logically possible that God (the maximally great being most think of when you say God) exists then he does exist.
I was watching Matt Dillahunty answering a question that stated that a God was necessary, but not in the exact context of this thread, just pointing that out to explain the core concept is not my idea, even though I will phrase it differently ....
It appears that the ontological argument is based on necessity?
Even accepting (which I don't) a God is necessary to create the universe/world why would it need to be a "maximally great being" ?
Why can't the "being" just be sufficient to create a universe? we'll call the being "Noddy"
Why couldn't "Noddy" cease to exist through the creation of the universe/world, by exploding into what we call the "big bang" that arguably lead to our world ?
Why can't the conclusion be "Noddy" existed, but doesn't exist anymore?
I know this will mess with talking to "Noddy" and leave us all alone in the world but the necessity or the conclusion doesn't have to be something humans want ....