"P1" is not true, ergo "C" does not follow. :point:P1: if God exists,nonresistant[passive] nonbelievers would not exist
P1:Nonresistant[passive] nonbelievers do exist
C: God does not exist — aminima
P1: if God exists, nonresistant[passive] nonbelievers would not exist
P1: Nonresistant[passive] nonbelievers do exist
C: God does not exist
— aminima
"P1" is not true, ergo "C" does not follow. :point:
e.g.
p1. If the round Earth exists, then "nonresistant" flat earthers would not exist.
p2. "Nonresistant" flat earthers do exist.
c. The round Earth does not exist. — 180 Proof
if God exists, nonresistant nonbelievers would not exist — aminima
A relationship with God would be the highest good in the world if God exists, and God would want to, and have the power to achieve this good. The reason this is the highest good is the same reason why any relationship is good, — aminima
The argument form the OP is using is modus tollens and it's valid. Your counterexample is not a counterexample. If p1 and p2 are true, c follows. c (The round Earth does not exist) just happens to be false, independent of the premises and that probably threw you off. — Agent Smith
Yeah. The argument in the OP is likely unsound (P1 is doubtful), but valid. I'm baffled by this simple mistake of 180's — bert1
I believe this is the point of contention.P1: if God exists, nonresistant nonbelievers would not exist — aminima
Hmm, are you sure? The flat earthers I have observed online seem very resistant to evidence of round earth.p2. "Nonresistant" flat earthers do exist. — 180 Proof
You need to make the case that god is good first — Tom Storm
It presupposes in specific terms what a particular account of a god would want - how can anyone demonstrate this? — Tom Storm
I only attempt to argue against an all-good God, so any evil Gods are not part of the scope of the argument — aminima
P1: if God exists, nonresistant nonbelievers would not exist
P1: nonresistant nonbelievers do exist
C: God does not exist
Defense of P1:
A relationship with God would be the highest good in the world if God exists, and God would want to, and have the power to achieve this good. The reason this is the highest good is the same reason why any relationship is good, (because it is intrinsically good, or mutually beneficial etc.) And surely a relationship with good would be the best relationship of all. — aminima
When the student is ready the teacher will appear. — Ashok Kumar/Jane Doe
p1. If the round Earth exists, then "nonresistant" flat earthers would not exist.
p2. "Nonresistant" flat earthers do exist.
c. The round Earth does not exist. — 180 Proof
if God desires people to know God exists — Astro Cat
P1: if God exists, nonresistant nonbelievers would not exist — aminima
One of my problems with the omnigod posit lies there.
I cant think of a rational reason for an omnipotent/omniscient god to have desires, can you? — universeness
An omniscient god may ask themselves "What is it like to question something without already knowing the answer?" or "what is it like to be restricted, to be unable to do anything and everything at once, what is it like to struggle?" — Benj96
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