This is something ive pulled up from a forum can be found here:
http://churchvoices.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=449
Just wanted to post this here and get some alternative viewpoints on the post. Especially from the non-theists. It is essentially a logical argument for the existance of God..
http://churchvoices.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=449
Just wanted to post this here and get some alternative viewpoints on the post. Especially from the non-theists. It is essentially a logical argument for the existance of God..
Ive been doing some study on this and have posted about it elsewhere, but am just now getting around to posting an in-depth look at the First Principles and their importance. These principles are essential for rational discussion and foundational arguments. They demonstrate correct logic far better than any mathematical or abstract reason could, for without them the latter couldnt exist. Realize that these principles are accepted and applied universally in all fields of study.
First principles are the foundation of knowledge. Without them nothing could be known. Even coherentism uses the first principle of noncontradiction to test the coherence of its system. Realism affirms that first principles apply to the real world. First principles undeniably apply to reality. The very denial that first principles apply to reality use first principles in the denial.
Without basic principles of reality, again, nothing could be know. Everything we know about reality is known by them. There are twelve basic first principles (if you want to challenge one or have questions about one, please just ask and Ill further explain the principle and its application):
First Principles
1. Principle of Existence = Being is (B is).
2. Principle of Identity = Being is Being (B is B).
3. Principle of Noncontradiction = Being is not NonBeing (B is not Non-B).
4. Principle of the Excluded Middle = Either Being or NonBeing (Either B or Non-B)
5. Principle of Causality = NonBeing cannot cause Being (Non-B>B).
6. Principle of Contingency = (or Dependency): Contingent Being cannot cause Contingent Being (B^c>B^c).
7. Positive Principle of Modality = Only Necessary Being can cause a Contingent Being (B^n>B^c).
8. Negative Principle of Modality = Necessary Being cannot cause a Necessary Being (B^n>B^n).
9. Principle of Existential Causality = Every Contingent Being is caused by a Necessary Being (B^n>B^c).
10. Principle of Existential Necessity = Necessary Being exists (B^n exists).
11. Principle of Existential Contingency = Contingent Being exists (B^c exists).
12. Principle of Analogy = Necessary Being is similar to similar Contingent Being(s) it causes (B^nsimilar>B^c)
For a realist, being is the basis of knowing. The rationalist Rene Descartes said, "I think, therefore, I am." But for a realist such as Thomas Aquinas, I am, therefore, I think. For one could not think unless he existed. Existence is fundamental to everything. Being is the basis for everything. Everything is (or, has) being. Hence, there is no disjunction between the rational and the real. Thought cannot be separated from things or knowing from being.
Undeniability. First principles are undeniable of reducible to the undeniable. They are either self-evident or reducible to the self-evident. And self-evident principles are either true by their nature of undeniable because the predicate is reducible to the subject. That the predicate is reducible to the subject means that one cannot deny the principle without using it for their denial.
Using First Principles to demonstrating Gods existence. Given these principles of being, one can know many things about reality; they relate thought and thing. Knowing is based in being. By these principles, one can even prove the existence of God as follows:
The Existence of God
1. Something exists (e.g., I do) (no. 1).
2. I am a contingent being (no. 11.).
3. Nothing cannot cause something (no. 5).
4. Only a Necessary Being can cause a contingent being (no. 7).
5. Therefore, I am caused to exist by a Necessary Being (follows from nos. 1-4).
6. But I am a personal, rational, and moral kind of being (since I engage in these kinds of activities).
7. Therefore, this Necessary Being must be a personal, rational, and moral kind of being, since I am similar to it by principle of analogy (no. 12).
8. But a Necessary Being cannot be contingent (i.e. not-necessary) in its being which would be a contradiction (no. 3).
9. Therefore, this necessary Being is personal, rational, and moral in a necessary way, not in a contingent way.
10. This Necessary Being is also eternal, uncaused, unchanging, unlimited, and one, since a Necessary Being cannot come to be (no. 10), be caused by another (no. Eight), undergo change, be limited by any possibility of what it could be (a Necessary Being has no possibility to be other than it is), or to be more than one Being (since there cannot be two infinite beings).
11. Therefore, one necessary, eternal, uncaused, unlimited (= infinite), rational, personal, and moral being exists.
12. Such a Being is appropriately called God in the theistic sense, because he possesses all the essential characteristics of a theistic God.
13. Therefore, the theistic God exists.
The first principles are indispensable to all knowledge. And first principles of being are a necessary prerequisite for all knowledge of being. For these first principles are undeniable (not necessary the syllogism for the existence of God, which can be challenged). For the very attempt to deny them affirms them. By them not only is reality known, but also the existence of God can be demonstrated as above.