marg wrote:Tarski,
My time has been spent transcribing. You had asked how the prof deal with a priori analytic math argument which you say are fruitful. I'll put up both (3 & 4) and (5 & 6) It is (5 & 6) which addresses this in particular. I quickly glanced at the latest reply of your in which you mentioned that the def'm doesn't assume anything. I disagree that prof Hall doesn't address this. It's subtle but there. I have discussed previously the concept. That things have to refer to something. Non existent thing do not have properties. Anyhow, just as you feel you can not explain any further on the point of def'n presuming a thing. I feel I can elaborate much more either on that. Prof Hall does address it though, but not explicitly. And math and symbolic logic may deal with properties on non existent things, but conceptually non existent thing have no properties.
Take a look at section 5 & 6...with regards to your question posed to me in a few posts back.
Section 3 - 4
Prof Hall goes into a brief bio of Kant, as well as what the time period was like at time 1776. Critique of Pure Reason published.
Kant says look,.....
.......
....
...
..
..
. The argument simply tells us if you are wasting your time worshipping non existent things, you are genuinely wasting your time. I like to think of the ontological argument then as an argument against idolatry rather than an argument for the existence of god.
Marg,
Once again this is all very very basic philosophy. I can't find much to argue with in there except for a couple points that might leave the wrong impression.
Some points:
1. The original ontological arguments did indeed fail because of the problems with treating existence as a property. It is also true that if one just asserts that a God by definition must exist and that somehow that means there does exist a real God then I agree that this may be described as a kind of begging of the question--that is assuming what was to be proved. However, it is not simply explicitly assumed as part of the definition of God. In any case, Godel's version is more subtle.
I agree that drawing conclusions by analyzing the very meaning of a single term such as bachelor does not give new information.
All basic familiar stuff here.
But....
2. When one takes the whole set of the Frankel-Zermelo axioms and searches for and tries to prove subtle theorems on a variety of topics such as differential geometry, real analysis, number theory etc. all of which are based on the F_Z axioms, then this is not a trivial matter of unpacking the meaning of a term and we see that we can truly discover deep things and add new information the the pool of human knowledge. That is what mathematics is.
Similarly for logic proper.
3. Godel was well aware of all of these basic things that we have discussed and that Prof. Hill has discussed. Godel tries an approach that is more sophisticated. Even if it ultimately fails notice that in definition 1 Godel does not assume that the very definition of God includes existence. He tires to show that
necessary existence is a property that must adhere to anything satisfying his definition of "god-like".
Indeed, it is at least conceivable to me that the definition as stated might actually contain the seeds of destruction in the sense that we may be able to construct an argument that there cannot exist any God-like beings at all (I imagine such an argument to be flawed but just as convincing as godel's attempt to prove the opposite).
In any case, we don't get into the traditional trouble until we try to include existence into the list of properties with which we reason since existence as a property is problematic. Now Godel uses "necessary existence" instead of existence and I guess the idea is that under certain notions about the way modal logic works, this is supposed to make it all OK. I am skeptical to say the least!!
But this trouble happened later on when axiom 5 connected the notion of positive with necessary existence. We are led to ask--is he then saying that necessary existence is a positive
property? He has made that an axiom so it really is assumed! Well if so, then we had better be darn sure that necessary existence can be a property at all! We had also better give good reasons why this should be taken as an axiom. Now we are in real trouble.
But notice that the trouble was not that Definition 1 simply assumes the existence God just because those three letters (g-o-d) are being used. Godel has cleverly separated the technical notion of god-like from the notion of necessary existence by use of the intervening notion of positivity. As for necessary existence, he
assumes it is not only a property but a positive property!
Godel also never allows any connotations of the word "god" to create an invalid step in the formal logic. This is another thing JAK gets wrong in my opinion. Godel does not covertly import anything that he hasn't already
admitted to be an assumption by virtue of it's inclusion in the list of axioms (axioms are indeed assumed--he knows this). Godel knows that if the axioms are not true or are somehow self contradictory then his argument is not sound.
when believers want to give their claims more weight, they dress these claims up in scientific terms. When believers want to belittle atheism or secular humanism, they call it a "religion". -Beastie
yesterday's Mormon doctrine is today's Mormon folklore.-Buffalo