Strengths and Weaknesses of the Ontological Argument
Strengths
Deductive and Analytic
a priori
logical, mathematical (Descartes)
Based on 1 statement
If you agree with the original statement, 'God is GTTWCBC, it is logical.
Starting Point, definition is understandable to everyone.
Then you have to agree or disagree with it. No ambiguity - God exists, or God does not exist.
All key terms have fixed and
unchanging meanings - no room
for vagueness
Does not depend on variable and changing evidence - the
definition is absolute and necessary. Can draw conclusions
which are not vague.
If existence is a predicate, to deny God (TTWNGCBC) exists is a contradiction
Davis: existence CAN be a real predicate. My concept of the real 100 thalers
has the predicate of purchasing power in the real world; the concept of 100
thalers does not
Anselm's = right = "it is better to exist in reality than
in mind alone' = persuasive
BUT... sometimes things are better in the mind
than in reality...
If Plantinga's possible world's theory + predicates is accepted, it is proof that God exists
Anti-realists: true for the believer
It is true that to reject something you have to have a
picture / concept of it in your mind, so rejecting the
conclusion is a contradiction
Excellent, if seen as a prayer (Anselm's starting point). Masterpiece for
the religious believer. Explains what Christians believe about God.
Weaknesses
Anselm: no agreed definition of God. Don't agree = OA falls apart.
Hume: no empirical evidence
Cannot define God into existence
can't establish the truth of something by analysing the concept.
Russell/Kant
You must prove that something exists before you add
exist as a quality/predicate of them.
Existence is not a predicate
Frede - 1st and 2nd order predicates. Anselm uses existence as 1st order predicate; should be 2nd
Process Theodicy believers - God is weak / fellow-sufferer, not TTWNGCBC
Just because you imagine something (like
unicorns/island) doesn't mean it exists - Gaunilo
A posteriori arguments e.g. religious experience, design,
cosmological = better arguments, based on evidence which can be observed
Dawkins - not a shred of evidence = disregard it.
Is the OA convincing?
YES
Relies on the definition of the
word God. If that definition is
agreed on, OA is convincing.
things that exist in reality are
better than things which exist in
the mind - convincing.
Convincing as a
masterpiece in logic
and word play. Flows
logically and is
coherent.
Convincing for the theist, e.g. Anselm.
Surely existence is a predicate? Without it, I would have
no other predicates. If so, then OA is convincing.
Counter-arguments to challenges by e.g. Gaunilo are
convincing. EG: islands do not have an 'intrinsic maximum'
- you can always add something to the definition e.g.
another palm tree. therefore, no contingent thing such as
an island can be the greatest conceivable. Only applies
to God, a necessary being. So, OA is convincing.
NO
If definition of God is not accepted = not convincing.
Just because it IS better to win the lottery
in reality than in the mind does NOT mean
that it has to happen in reality.
Can define things as we wish, but does not mean it exists e.g. Santa Claus.
Russell / Barth etc - explains what God is like, but not whether he exists.
Existence is not a predicate - see Hume, Kant, Russell, Frede. If the OA cannot apply to anything other than God, is it really convinging?