My unmodified claim. Yes, but not the modified one. I thought we progressed beyond this to the point where you understood that.
The modified claim is no different from the original. All you did was to change this:
The only means to do that is to examine all elements of the set S and find that they are not identical to X.
to this:
The only means to do that for a arbitrary object X is to examine all elements of the set S and find that they are not identical to X.
All you did was to add the phrase "for a arbitrary object X", which was already implicit in the first statement. You changed exactly zero.
It's as though I said "My father's on the way -- he'll explain everything when he gets here" and changed it to "My father's on the way -- my dad will explain everything when he gets here", and claimed that I'd made some significant change.
drkitten's refutation stands.
Okay, I see what you are saying. But you're forgetting something. The strong atheist position refutes the existance of ALL gods. And I dare say there exist some definitions of god that are not contingent on the existance or non-existance of other things (in fact most common conceptions of god.)
I'm not forgetting anything.
Now you're the one making assertions, no? If you care to pony up with a definition of God, then do so. If you don't care to provide a definition of God, then you are not making any claim about God.
The strong atheist position need only demonstrate that no possible definitions of God obligate anyone to grant them potential reality. As I've said, God either interacts with the universe or does not. If it does not, then the definition is empty, and no one is obligated to grant it potential reality. If it does, and this interaction is consistent with natural law, then is equivalent to natural force, making God not only redundant (and thus superfluous and dispensible) but also not actually God, and therefore no one is obliged to grant it the potential of independent reality as God. If it does and this interaction violates natural law, then God is contrary to fact, and no one is obligated to grant it potential reality.
DrKitten's counter examples depended on object contingency. Very few possible things do. If it makes you happy we can further define god as being non-contingent on the existance/non-existance of other objects.
That is still not a definition of God. That's just a definition of a vague something or other, which is not a definition of anything.
But this isn't strictly required for the proof to hold.
Yes it is. If your claim that we must search every element of S for X fails, then your proof fails, and you need a new one.