Existence Of God essay topics
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Rational Arguments Concerning The Existence Of God
3,570 wordsSynopsis: Rational arguments concerning the existence of God are quite fascinating since they try to establish the existence of the 'Wholly Other' from things we see every day and from known attributes that we fasten to God. The first part of essay discusses whether we can do this through the 'just about ageless processes' of induction and deduction. It presents a 'general' theists definition of God and looks at the a posteriori and a priori arguments which arise from this definition before goin...
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Aristotle's Argument For God's Existence
3,088 wordsMost people have not witnessed or experienced God and therefore are confused about its existence. In Western theology, three theories have emerged to demonstrate the existence of God. These theories are the ontological argument, the cosmological argument, and the teleological argument. St. Anselm of eleventh century, and Descartes of seventeenth century, have used the ontological argument for proving the existence of God. The God, for them, is supreme, 'needing nothing outside himself, but needf...
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God Saint Thomas
920 wordsSaint Thomas Aquinas Saint Thomas Aquinas was a philosopher, theologian, Doctor of the Catholic Church, and is the patron saint of Catholic Universities, colleges, and schools. He was born in Rocca Secc a, Italy, in 1225 and was born into a wealthy family. He even was related to the kings of Aragon, Castile, and France. His journey into Catholic beliefs seemed predestined, for he was told when he was a young child that he would become a friar and no one would be equal to him. He started his ques...
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Story Of The Return To God
1,048 wordsAugustine titled his deeply philosophical and theological autobiography Confessions to implicate two aspects of the form the work would take. To confess, in Augustine's time, meant both to give an account of one's faults to God and to praise God (to speak one's love for God). These two aims come together in the Confessions in an elegant but complex sense: Augustine narrates his ascent from sinfulness to faithfulness not simply for the practical edification of his readers, but also because he bel...
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God In Jesus Christ
2,870 wordsGod. The fact that you are reading this suggests that you are at least partially open to His existence and open to learning more. If so, then this essay is for you. I want you to know that God is real and that God loves you. Does God exist and if so where is He - where can He be found In my experience this is the question that many people are asking today. At the same time many people have come to the point in their lives where they have serious doubts about God - or have already denied His exis...
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Incompatible And Natural Evil Exists
2,454 wordsTHE CHRISTIAN CONCEPT OF GOD Christians claim that their concept of God is found in the Bible. Known as classical theism, this view of God has long been considered the orthodox theistic position of the Western world. Though there are numerous divine attributes that we could examine, for our present purposes it is sufficient to say that the God of classical theism is at least (1) personal and incorporeal (without physical parts), (2) the Creator and Sustainer of everything else that exists, (3) o...
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Existence Of God Obviously Pascal
1,388 words"Who is God Where is God Does God really exist Should I believe in God" These are some of the questions which are asked by millions of people each and every day who are desperately trying to find some meaning in their life. Blaise Pascal tried to help society, as well as himself, to find the best solution to these problems. Pascal attempted to determine if it was worth it to bet on God's existence. Were the atheists right in not wasting their time concerning the existence of God Have the true be...
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Existence Of God
951 wordsGood God When one walks through the streets of humanity, one must choose their destiny. Is it to believe in God, or to become conservative and choose not to believe? Well, the people of the world should all just creep within their minds, and choose not to follow the Messiah onto the deceptive fields of love. These people become sicken with doubt, and unleashing them are quite easy. But the world may never know, for the fools that are blinded with salvation still wander in oblivion. Objection num...
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Attributes Of The Two Substances
1,382 wordsThis paper will outline Spinoza's argument in Part 1 of his Ethics of substance. He argues that there is only one substance, which is the same as God, that includes everything in the universe. It will walk through each proposition and explain his proof of it, which relies of his stated definitions. This paper will also explain the difference between Spinoza's belief of substance and that of Leibniz from his Discourse on Metaphysics. It will then argue that Leibniz's account of the number of subs...
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Existence Of God
2,446 wordsconsiders the God to be the most important figure in its religion. God can be defined as a being conceived as the perfect, omnipotent, omniscient originator and ruler of the universe, the principal object of faith and worship in monotheistic religions (1). There are many people that do not believe in any religion. People who do not believe in a religion have no reason for believing in a God. People who do not believe in a God and argue against the existence of God are proving something that is c...
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Wiesel
438 wordsNight is a horrible tale of murder and man's inhumanity to man. Wiesel saw his family, friends, and fellow Jews degraded and murdered. Wiesel also states in his book that his God, to whom he was so devoted, was also 'murdered' by the Nazis. In the novel Wiesel changed from a devout Jew to a broken young man who doubted his belief in God. When Wiesel first comes to the concentration camp and sees all the walking skeletons, he can't believe that this is real. He feels that he might be dreaming. Ho...
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God Without Existence
1,528 wordsIn the New Merriam Webster Dictionary, sophism is defined as a plausible but fallacious argument. In Rene Descartes Meditation V, he distinguishes the existence of God, believing he must prove that god exists before he can examine any corporeal objects outside of himself. By proving that the existence of God is not a sophism, he also argues that God is therefore the Supreme Being and the omnipotent one. His conclusion that God does exist enables him to prove the existence of material things, and...
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What Is The Purpose Of Human Existence
580 wordsHave you ever wondered why we, humans, exist Who is our creator How did we get here Well, as for me, these questions pop into my mind especially right before I go to sleep. These questions have been on my mind since I was about five years old till present time. Perhaps one day, Ill get me questions answered. It all begin when I was about five years old. I remember waking up during the middle of the night, gazing into this green night light against the shadows of a statue of the infant Jesus. And...
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Descartes Universal Methodic Doubt
3,677 wordsIt is from the views of Descartes that most of the metaphysical systems of the last three centuries begin, trying to improve upon them, or to overcome what they regard as difficulties in the Cartesian system. Ren Descartes is responsible for the predominance of the problem of human knowledge in modern philosophy. Many of the systems of philosophy and theories of knowledge which have arisen in the last three centuries can trace their lineage directly to the influence of the questions Descartes ra...
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Existence Of God
1,501 wordsAnselm's ontological argument is an explanation that Anselm came up with to prove that God exists. He uses a step by step procedure to persuade you into believing that since we can picture and think of God as the greatest being, then he must exist. In the beginning of his discussion, Anselm asks what is it that we mean when we speak of God. The first thing I think of when I speak of God is the creator of earth, the superior being. Anselm also believes that whence speak of God we are speaking of ...
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Existence Of God As The World's Designer
1,538 wordsPhilosophy poses us questions that we long to have answers for. One most popular philosophical question boggles the minds of people around the world: Is there a God Ever since mankind was created, this question was among the speculations that clouded our minds. The world is a grand and intricate place, so where did it come from There are many theories about the wonders of the world, and it is, as of now, scientifically impossible to prove that there is an ever existing God. So, why do so many of...
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True Empiricist The Existence Of God
1,719 wordsFor a Genuine empiricist the phrase God Exists is meaningless To come to a proper understanding of the question, a few key concepts must first be established. What is meant by the term Empiricism To an empiricist, the occurrence of consciousness is simply the product of experience. It is assumed that all human knowledge is acquired from experience and observation alone. It is believed that we are born with an empty slate; it is through sense perception that our knowledge begins to form and shape...
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Five Arguments On The Existence Of God
1,224 words"Whether God Exists" Countless philosophers since the beginning of recorded history have pondered the question of whether God exists. One such philosopher, Saint Thomas Aquinas, put forth his own theory on the existence of God. In his text "Whether God Exists", he stated that through his five arguments he could prove God's existence. His five arguments are from motion, from first efficient cause, from possibility and necessity, from gradation, and from design. Aquinas begins his text with two ob...
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Saint Anselms God
561 wordsNow we believe that You are something that which nothing greater can be thought. Or can it be that nothing of such a nature does not exist, since the Fool has said in his heart, there is no God (II). Saint Anselms point in his argument for the existence of God is clear cut and simple to understand. He clearly sets forth the idea that if God is so great, than no greater being can be thought of or conceived. For one who already believes in God, this argument is meaningful and easy to accept, yet f...
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Existence Of Material Objects
2,479 wordsIn Meditations on the First Philosophy, Descartes tries to put our knowledge of the world on the same footing of the knowledge of mathematics, that is, to expand our knowledge by deriving! ^0 theorems! +/- from! ^0 axioms! +/-. Here the axioms is something that is absolutely certain and indubitable, free from all possible doubts. Through firm hold of the axioms, he goes further to determine what he can derive from it. The Meditations are divided into six parts: Meditation c~n: Of the Things of W...