There is a faulty premise here, namely that it is possible for God not to exist. This is a contradiction in terms, according to Aquinas' definition of God: ipsum esse subistens, or the subsistent act of being itself. Therefore since God is the essential act of existence, and since God exists inner-mostly in all things (another Aquinian def.), it is both (1) objectively impossible that God does not exist and (2) subjectively impossible to imagine it, for the very subject who affirms the so-called nonexistence of God is herself grounded in God according to the above definition. — Brian A
This is a contradiction in terms, according to Aquinas' definition of God: ipsum esse subistens, or the subsistent act of being itself. — Brian A
I don't think you can define something into existence, as it were. — jorndoe
I don't think that's what he's doing, though. I've struggled with this too, but I think the claim is that if God exists, then he exists necessarily (cannot not exist). The "if" entails composing proofs, and giving a proof is different from merely stipulating a definition. — Thorongil
[...] which seems rather different from the more elaborate gods in theism. — jorndoe
What do you mean by logical consistency? The principle of non-contradiction? — Thorongil
You think God is the principle of non-contradiction? That is incoherent. — Thorongil
It seems there are two separate issues here. The first is whether God exists. But the second is that supposing he does exist, is it possible for him to categorically not exist. And to this I say no, since existence is an essential property of God, in the same sense, perhaps, that "having a horn" is the essential property of a unicorn.
Of course one could say that if God doesn't exist, then it is possible for him to categorically not exist, but that would be a tautology.
In the end, if God really does exist, then my view is that it is not possible for him to categorically cease existing, for the above reason. — Brian A
Existing is an essential property of God, or existing at all times is an essential property of God, which is it?
I don't think you can define something into existence, as it were.
Conclusion: Therefore, it is not possible for God to categorically not exist (existence is an essential property of God). — Brian A
It seems there are two separate issues here. The first is whether God exists. But the second is that supposing he does exist, is it possible for him to categorically not exist. And to this I say no, since existence is an essential property of God, in the same sense, perhaps, that "having a horn" is the essential property of a unicorn. — Brian A
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