C
CatholicSoxFan
Guest
I was talking to someone else on the Ontological Argument, and rather than denying the first premise or denying Modal Logic, as I expected they would, they instead said that the idea that it is a great-making property to be omnipotent, omniscient, necessary, etc. is nothing but an a priori assumption, and that the whole argument is basically just begging the question, because the only way someone would only accept the argument if they also accepted the a priori assumptions like the aforementioned claim that omnipotence, omniscience, necessity, etc. are great-making properties. He particularly argued like this in respect to necessity, and contended that to claim that to be necessary is greater than to be contingent is nothing but an a priori assumption. To those who use this argument, how would you answer this objection?