Pros And Cons Of The Ontological Argument

814 Words2 Pages

Traditional Philosophical Proofs
Through studies, “Most arguments for the existence of God, such as; the Teleological Argument, the cosmological Argument, and The Moral argument, are from the ancient world. The Ontological argument comes from medieval times. By the moral argument has modern interest, emanating from works of Immanuel Kant”. (489) All fighting for their meaning to exist.
The ontological Argument is the belief that if humans can imagine a God that is an absolute perfect or necessary being, then He must exist. The argument was first constructed by Anselm (1133-1109) and contradicted by a monk named Gaunilo. Latter in history the argument was reformed by Rene Descarte (1595-1650) and disputed by prist Caterus and Pierre Gassendi. …show more content…

William Paley argued for the interpretation that every creation has a creator. For example a watch must have a watchmaker; one does not simply just appear from thin air, or imagination (McCoy 31). This argument “is not a certain “proof” of God’s existence, but does express a strong possibility- in a case-effect natural universe, it is logical to expect that every effect has an adequate cause” (McCoy 31). Bertrand Russell tried to disprove this argument of God’s existence with the theory of evolution, but his evidence fell short and was irrelevant like most evolutionary facts(31). Other influences included; Thomas Aquinas and John Stuart Mill. The revealing of contradicting facts and beliefs shown by “appearance of design” and “evidence in design” lead to ignorance shown by Richard Dawkins and others. This may show that many scientists cover up their misunderstandings and lack of evidence to avoid the existence of God being revealed through their work limiting views on naturalistic causes. On the other hand this argument can lead to extreme naturalism if taken too far. While arguments could lead to the world being created through “unguided materteral causes” the evidence that life comes from other forms of life is primarily relevant, but can be argued by an existence of a created

Open Document