The Cosmological, Design, and Ontological Argument

527 Words3 Pages
“Why do I exist? What created the universe? Does God exist?” questions which have challenged philosophers for many years. The cosmological, design, and ontological arguments attempt to answer these questions. Throughout this essay I will share with you the ways that the cosmological, design, and ontological arguments are the same yet different from each other. You may find that these arguments are confusing, contradicting, incoherent or just plain unconvincing, once you unpack the truth that God actually does exist. The cosmological, design, and ontological arguments all agree with each other. Each of these arguments is the same in the way that they use unfounded assumptions to prove what cannot be proven. These arguments never get to any particular God. They have all established that the existence can be described by itself; none of this even implies a deity, or a universal consciousness. When you start by rejecting the presumption of a God, all the arguments fall flat on their face. What these three arguments are, are thesis trying to defend the indefensible. Although, these three arguments all agree in the way that they use unfound assumptions to prove what has yet to be proven; they do disagree on the studies of how to prove what really is God. The ontological argument believes that God is a “being”. The cosmological argument believes that God is “the universe”. Then there is the design argument which needs evidence to prove that there is a God. The Ontological argument seeks to prove that God does exist by proving, that He cannot not exist. The ontological argument is that God, being defined as most great or perfect, must exist; a God who exists is greater than a God who does not. The cosmological argument is a branch of astronomy involving the origin and evolution of the universe. Astronomy deals with individual objects and phenomena or collections of
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