The Ontological argument is an argumnet asserting to prove the existence of a (particular kind of) god using pure reason. It usually goes something like this:
Apologists like William Lane Craig rely heavily on this argument, and IMO overstates the universality of acceptance of premises #2-5. I certainly do have issues with premise #1, as the definition of being "morally perfect" cannot exist in an objective sense, because "perfection" as to personal character traits are in the eye of the beholder.
But the other premises also have serious issues as well, specifically with #2, which tries to make such a God a necessary being. The problem I see with this argument is it's abstract fuzziness. Even if a maximal being (by abstract definition of what it is) must necessarily exist in every possible worlds, the very definition of a maximal being would change according to the different world it existed in. For example, morality does not exist in a vacuum, but must be applied to real sentient individuals in actual situations that could potentially happen. What morality means requires context, and the context in all possible worlds would necessarily change dramatically according to the world - causing "perfect morality" itself to change.
As such, you're not talking about the same maximal being existing in every possible world, but a different being that is maximal according to the possible world it is in. Since the assertion of the Ontological argument is trying to establish a single maximal being that exists the same in all possible worlds, it appears to not hold up under this analysis.
Furthermore, if we can imagine a possible world where a maximal being does not exist, why doesn't the ontological argument work in reverse. I've read Craig's "rebuttal" to Dawkins' argument, but I think it misses the point. Craig fails to see the sarcasm of "a maximal being that does not exist but creates everything" as being internally inconsistent. The point is that if we can imagine a possible world that does not include a maximal being, then it can exist just as well as a possible with with such a being - and the argument flows on from there.
Would anyone care to address this?
1. It is possible that a maximally great being exists. (Maximal excellence to include such properties as omniscience, omnipotence, and moral perfection.)
2. If it is possible that a maximally great being exists, then a maximally great being exists in some possible world.
3. If a maximally great being exists in some possible world, then it exists in every possible world.
4. If a maximally great being exists in every possible world, then it exists in the actual world.
5. If a maximally great being exists in the actual world, then a maximally great being exists.
6. Therefore, a maximally great being exists.
Apologists like William Lane Craig rely heavily on this argument, and IMO overstates the universality of acceptance of premises #2-5. I certainly do have issues with premise #1, as the definition of being "morally perfect" cannot exist in an objective sense, because "perfection" as to personal character traits are in the eye of the beholder.
But the other premises also have serious issues as well, specifically with #2, which tries to make such a God a necessary being. The problem I see with this argument is it's abstract fuzziness. Even if a maximal being (by abstract definition of what it is) must necessarily exist in every possible worlds, the very definition of a maximal being would change according to the different world it existed in. For example, morality does not exist in a vacuum, but must be applied to real sentient individuals in actual situations that could potentially happen. What morality means requires context, and the context in all possible worlds would necessarily change dramatically according to the world - causing "perfect morality" itself to change.
As such, you're not talking about the same maximal being existing in every possible world, but a different being that is maximal according to the possible world it is in. Since the assertion of the Ontological argument is trying to establish a single maximal being that exists the same in all possible worlds, it appears to not hold up under this analysis.
Furthermore, if we can imagine a possible world where a maximal being does not exist, why doesn't the ontological argument work in reverse. I've read Craig's "rebuttal" to Dawkins' argument, but I think it misses the point. Craig fails to see the sarcasm of "a maximal being that does not exist but creates everything" as being internally inconsistent. The point is that if we can imagine a possible world that does not include a maximal being, then it can exist just as well as a possible with with such a being - and the argument flows on from there.
Would anyone care to address this?