HeavyAaron
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2005
- Messages
- 1,208
I'm afraid that's overly broad. For example, it's not logically impossible for fell beasts to evolve and live on earth. But nevertheless, fell beasts do not live on earth.
It's a definition. How can it be too broad? Yes, fell beasts are possible objects under the definition. Not all possible objects are existant objects. But all existant objects are possible objects.
Just because a thing is not logically impossible doesn't mean it may possibly be real.
If this is supposed to be an apriori statement I'd disagree with you and ask for an example object. If this is saying something after observation, well, sure it's true that we may use observations to eliminate some possible objects as not existant. That's especially easy when you've included geographical location as part of their definition.
No it does not require knowing of all existant objects. You have only restated the unsupported assertion that the whole universe must be examined before you can conclude that anything either does or doesn't possibly exist. This is simply not so.
It's theoretically what I've proven. Hardly unsupported, I've provided a semi-formal proof. You need to show the proof is unsound, not merely declare it "unsupported."
First you have to know the qualities of the thing. If you don't, then nothing meaningful can be said about it at all.
I haven't posited a particular God definition. That's beyond the scope of my intention. I did speicify that the proof only works for definitions of God that are internally consistant. And that is a catagory of thing. One need not specify an object completely to be able to speak of its properties and the like. So long as all objects in the catagory possess a quality one can talk about that quality as pertaining to any of its members. In this case that quality would be "possible objects."
Once you know the defining qualities, you only have to know enough about the world to be able to say "It definitely is", "It definitely ain't", or "Can't tell".
That would be an exhaustive list.
Sorry, too broad a definition. God has defining qualities. You can't simply make claims regarding "an arbitrary possible object X", then tack on "let X be God". God is not just any arbitrary thing you care to imagine.
I didn't. Let variable=value is to give a SPECIFIC value to X. Given a specific definition of God, let X be the object furfilling that definition.
Aaron