In fact, it is precisely at the present point in the argument that Scott's claim can be localized. Godel's assumption that the family of positive properties is closed under conjunction turns
out to be equivalent to the possibility of God's existence, a point also made in [SobOl]. We will see, later on, Godel's proof that God's existence is necessary, if possible, is correct. It is substantially different from that of Descartes, and has many points of intrinsic interest. What is curious is that the proof as a whole breaks down at precisely the same point as that of Descartes: God's possible existence is simply assumed, though in a disguised form. — [7]
A1) What is "positive" and why not both? — tim wood
A2) How does that work? — tim wood
And he might just maintain that the less evident axioms, for example that a conjunction of positive properties is positive, is an assumption which he adopts on grounds of mere plausibility and is entitled to accept until some incompatibility between clearly positive properties is discovered.
As a starting point, I'm guessing that failure to differentiate imaginary/fictional and real can lead to reification; that certainly holds elsewhere. — jorndoe
"The doctrine of Divine simplicity [quite nonsensical], according to which God is absolutely simple, has been out of favour for a while now in both Christian theology and philosophy. It is accused of being inconsistent with the doctrine of the Incarnation (Hughes 1989: 253–64), with that of the Trinity (Moreland and Craig 2003: 586) and of being incoherent in its own right (Plantinga 1980: 46–61)." — Collapsing the modal collapse argument: On an invalid argument against divine simplicity (Christopher Tomaszewski)
Which overlooks - ignores - the conditional. At least two problems, then: the logic, and the definitions. I'm not much interested in the details of the argument. If you want to go through them step-by-step I reckon I won't be the only person to learn from the exercise. But categorical statements are a bear. If they're important, then they need to be proved to be true - and that can be difficult to impossible.A1) What is "positive" and why not both?
— tim wood
See note. If being all-knowing is positive, being not-all-knowing is not positive. Beautiful, not beautiful. — Lionino
And so forth. I cannot tell if the form of the argument is valid: if I convert it to truth tables, it is not. And what is meant here by "exist." — tim wood
And so forth. I cannot tell if the form of the argument is valid: if I convert it to truth tables, it is not. And what is meant here by "exist." — tim wood
what is meant by the words "God" (or "God-like") and "positive" — EricH
You do not understand enough mathematics — Tarskian
Let's try A1. You can tell me where/how this truth table fails. I render A1 asYou can't easily convert to truth tables. — Lionino
Maybe I'm reading in too much. By positive/negative do you mean purely affirmation and negation. - which really won't do for your, "Gödel's original "positive properties" is to be interpreted in a moral-aesthetic sense only."which are whether it necessarily implies or is implied by a not positive property, — Lionino
Maybe I'm reading in too much. — tim wood
Which is not-so-amenable to pure affirmation/negation.Yes, moral-aesthetic sense. What you quoted is me translating A2. — Lionino
Then maybe it should be expressed in a different form - excluding the "both"? You did not object to my rendering of it.A1 is an axiom, so it is not tautological, — Lionino
Agreed - except that I do not see a mathematical process unveiling meaning - how could it?The semantics, i.e.the truth about rr, lies elsewhere than in any of the syntactic consequences provable from T. Furthermore, it requires a specific mathematical process to unveil such semantics. — Tarskian
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