All explanation, consists in trying to find something simple and ultimate on which everything else depends. And I think that by rational inference what we can get to that’s simple and ultimate is God. But it’s not logically necessary that there should be a God. The supposition ‘there is no God’ contains no contradiction. — British theologian Richard Swinburne, 2009
If G's existence is necessary, then G carries sentience along to all possible worlds, so that sentience exists in all possible worlds, making it necessary by definition, which contradicts 1. (G figures at most in possible worlds with sentience. A necessary characteristic of a necessary entity, is itself necessary.) — jorndoe
I'm finding this one hard to make sense of. — unenlightened
Necessarily, every work of art requires an artist, and necessarily, an artist must be sentient. But not necessarily is every work of art sentient — unenlightened
... but works of art are not (possible) worlds. — Terrapin Station
Anyway, someone who believed that God's existence is necessary would think that the first premise is false. — Terrapin Station
I'm finding this one hard to make sense of. Why should God 'carry' sentience to all possible worlds? God creates a possible world consisting of, say, a piano, and not much else. Why does the piano have to be sentient? It looks as though there is the assumption of immanence??? — unenlightened
What does it mean to say that God is sentient? If it has any meaning at all it clearly cannot be sentience as we know it. And even if it were it seems an awfully big leap from every possible world has a sentient being involved in some kind of a relationship with it to all possible worlds have sentience and further still to all possible worlds are sentient. — Barry Etheridge
Claiming God's existence and solipsism is such a strange combination. — Emptyheady
Sure, but that's a tad bit presumptuous, implausibly strong, unjustified, especially in comparison to any number of alternatives.
Consider a rather simple world consisting in one zero-dimensional "thing", that's indivisible, and changeless, and that's about it. Can you derive a contradiction from that? Not particularly interesting, but seemingly consistent nonetheless. — jorndoe
If one believes that God's existence is necessary for any possible world [one] would think that a world that consists solely of a single simple that's not God is impossible. — Terrapin Station
I actually think that a world with a single "zero-dimensional thing" is incoherent, by the way, and I'm an atheist. That's simply because I don't believe that there can be zero-dimensional things. — Terrapin Station
By assertion a world without sentience is impossible because G is absent therefrom, because G is necessary (by definition), which, by the way, holds for any G. — jorndoe
A possible world is an inclusive entirety, where ordinary logic holds. Here are some suggestions, e.g. deism (ignore the simplicity, it's just for illustration): — jorndoe
Definitions of God that suppose God is necessary will have to consider exclusion of sentience thereof. — jorndoe
A logical world is an all-inclusive, complement-free entirety (all, "everything") where ordinary logic holds.
Like in the illustration, the whole deism column is a suggestion of a possible world (God and Universe). — jorndoe
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