I don't either. And what he said pretty much coincided with JAK by the way.
No it doesn't. JAK doesn't even have a cursery understanding of the subject matter, it's very obvious. I think we'd better just part ways on JAK's mastery of logic, I won't be responding to apologetics on his behalf anymore in this thread.
...platonism..
My comments here essentially meant what Tarski said, "So it seems that we can be left wondering whether God is "real" even if we accept the formal validity of Godel's ontological argument.
So then what do I mean by real? Well, that is a problem, but not if one wants to talk about a Christian God who can directly interfere with the flow of history". A platonic God wouldn't be a very big victory and most of us would still be confused over the way in which he actually existed. Also T's point 2 in his summary.
I'm assuming when you say platonism you are referring to absolute unchanging universal truths/concepts.
Well yeah, "the Good", which is importantly, ontologically distinct from this world. Now think ontological argument...
It is a closed reasoning system which is not applicable to the actual world and says nothing about an actual God
You might think this parallels something Tarski said, but it doesn't. Your demands on an "actual God" outstrip the supply of Platonism's inventory. In other words, you are wanting to set up the "God" of the ontological argument to be something more than it was meant to be, and then say logic alone or a "closed system" can't demonstrate it. If the ontological argument were true, you'd most likely reject the "God" established as "God".
..I didn't agree with you then remember
..ah, and i was trying..right?