J
James_S_Saint
Guest
I would propose that if we accept the following definition for existence, the arguments concerning God’s existence might go a lot easier and more progressive, besides it seems silly to argue over what might exist if we do not have a clear understanding of what it really means to exist;
Existence == That which has effect. That which has the ability to affect.
There are 4 reasons to accept this definition.
Also in the PSR arguments, any “possible world” that contains things that have no effect can be dismissed as being irrelevant.
Any rational argument?
Existence == That which has effect. That which has the ability to affect.
There are 4 reasons to accept this definition.
- Rational relevance - If something has truly no effect on anything whatsoever, we really don’t care if it exists anyway. We can propose trillions of things that might exist but don’t have effect. What would be the point? It would be a waste of mind time.
- Detectable Empiricism - We decide that something exists only when we detect that something is having effect. All of our senses function based on the effect that something else has upon them. We use equipment to increase our sensory ability, but still if nothing effects the equipment in any way, we declare that nothing was there.
- Common Usage - In reality, people are already using the word “exist” to mean this definition. They often never think about it, but in every case of which I am aware, the person really means that something existing means that it has the potential to affect something even if not already affecting something.
- Support from Science - Science concluded long ago that in reality all things have at least some minuscule affect on all other things. Often this is more of a chain effect than a direct effect.
Also in the PSR arguments, any “possible world” that contains things that have no effect can be dismissed as being irrelevant.
Any rational argument?