An attribute of what?It seems as plain as the nose on my face that existence is an attribute.
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An attribute of what?It seems as plain as the nose on my face that existence is an attribute.
That's why I put [sic] after "non-existent thing" as kind of a joke. There's no such thing as a non-existent thing, and that's why it can't be red, can't have attributes.
One problem with the ontological argument for God's existence is the idea that existence is an attribute. The weaker versions of the ontological argument, as you know, go something like:
However, existence is not an attribute of things. When one says: "God exists" or "I exist" or "planet Earth exists" one is not really describing God, oneself, or planet earth. "X exists" describes the world, not X. "X exists" really means "the world includes X". So existence is not an attribute.
- God is the greatest conceivable being.
- Having the attribute "exists" is greater than not having the attribute.
- Therefore God exists.
Who said that existence is caused by a being?
Using God is Truth, and Truth is the only reality, because what is not true does not exist, then is Truth a being? (I use Truth as all that is truth).
It is said that if Truth could describe itself it would say "I Am". Sounds familiar.
I Am, does not point to a "being", it points to "Is".
Okay, but for things whose existence we are unsure of? Can we possibly make any claims based on attributes they may or may not have?
Okay, fair enough, but that doesn't make existence an attribute. Rather, one says that something is an entity (that it exists) when it has attributes. It isn't existence that is an attribute, but rather all the attributes that it does have. All existence means is "this has attributes".
eudaimonia,
Mark
I think I get what you're saying, and to be honest, I can't conceive of a thing existing which has no other attributes except existence, but I still think if you make a list of attributes of any thing, one of those would have to be "it exists".
This may be silly, but what if someone invited you to go hear a new band you've never heard of. You ask "what do they sound like?" (asking about attributes). And the person starts off saying "Well first of all, the band exists, and they sound like...". That would be absurd in real life, but it would be true.
But what if you ask what the band sounds like, and the person says "I was just kidding, there's no band to go see". Have they then removed an attribute? I guess you could say no
they didn't remove an attribute because there was nothing real to remove it from, but if you added the attribute of existence, you'd be adding an attribute wouldn't you?
I'm not "adding existence" to anything, but admitting that there is an entity to which I am referring that is actually a band and has a sound.
If you bear in mind that all of reality exists as a conception in the mind (even a chair when you are touching it and looking at it)
you are adding existence to the conception.
The chair exists outside of my mind. That is not something to ignore. It is the chair that has attributes.
Yes, I have a concept of a chair in my mind, but it is the chair itself (outside of my mind) that is the referent. When I describe the chair, my description is intended to refer to the chair, not to my mental contents.
No, I am not. I am saying that I haven't made a mistake in identifying a chair. The concept exists, to be sure, but I haven't "added existence" to the chair.
And that distinguishes existing things from which`other things?Everything and anything that exists, right?
The actual question is: Do there exist objects that don´t exist?I think that existence is an extrinsic property of all finite objects. But are all objects finite?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intrinsic_and_extrinsic_properties
I think that existence is an extrinsic property of all finite objects.
That the chair exists outside your mind is only a matter of faith.
And that distinguishes existing things from which`other things?
For example? What is there that doesn´t exist?From all else.![]()
It was very honest of you to put the second "things" in quotation marks - because "things that don´t exist" is an oxymoron.Seriously, I think the only way you can prevail here is to deny that some things exist and some "things" don't exist.
Exactly.And it makes my brain hurt to try and think of a thing not existing, because that means that the thing is not a thing, and is there such a thing as "no-thing"?, and so forth.