I do not believe in Richard Dawkins.
Or rather, I would not believe he was real if it were not for the plethora of evidence which exists, even just the evidence circulating amongst the sprawling content of the internet. The book reviews, blog entries, interviews, lectures, Wikipedia entries, biographies, testimonials, and endless third-party sources seem to [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Argument’
Anslem Meets Jess: More Truth and Subjectivity
Posted in Existentialism and Authenticity, God and Theology, tagged Anselm, Argument, conversations, God, Jess, ontological, proofs, restaurant, subjectivity, theology, Truth on 12 August, 2008 | 2 Comments »
The restaurant industry is a fast and free-flowing universe, with countless comments, jokes, implications, scattered conversations, and random observations lost amongst the crevices of time in between running food and taking orders.
It started with me bragging that I could prove God with a simple six-step proof in an undeniable way. I was very smug and [...]
Starting Points
Posted in God and Theology, Philosophy in General, tagged a priori, absolute, Anselm, Argument, axioms, Descartes, disprovable, existence, God, Jordan, Meditations on First Philosophy, of, ontological, ontology, provable, reason, self on 4 April, 2008 | Leave a Comment »
It was a gloomy day sometime in 1640, or at least, I like to imagine it was a gloomy, quiet day in Europe when Descartes, dressed still in his nightgown, sat down in front of his softly cackling fireplace and drew his ink bottle and paper towards him to compose the Meditations on First Philosophy.
It [...]