Author:
Wade A. Tisthammer
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Date Posted: 03/15/04 12:15pm
In reply to:
Damoclese
's message, "But it isn't." on 03/14/04 8:01am
>>
>>Yes, I agree that God must be greater than a state of
>>non-being if premise 2 is correct.
>
>
>No. That's not qui the it. Nothing IS a state of non
>being.
>God, being the greatest being, has to be the grandest
>non being. (as non-being is simply the null state of
>being)
>
> But premise 7
>>read, “God must be the greater nothing.” But I fail
>>to see why God must be any kind of nothing from
>>premise 2.
>
>Because if God is the greatest being, he has to be the
>greatest when it comes to non-being, as non-being is
>simply a null state of being.
So if God is greater than nothing, God has to be non-existent? Again, that's a non sequitur. It seems clear that to have the greatest state of being would not be non-being. If anything, God being the greatest being would imply having the greatest form of being, not the greatest form of non-being. And non-being would be the lowest state of being, not the greatest. To get from premise 2 to premise 7 you would need a premise that connects the two, something about being the greatest being implying non-being, though I doubt such a premise would be plausible.
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