Instigator / Pro
18
1485
rating
92
debates
45.65%
won
Topic
#376

Does God Exist?

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
6
3
Better sources
6
4
Better legibility
3
3
Better conduct
3
2

After 3 votes and with 6 points ahead, the winner is...

David
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Standard
Number of rounds
4
Time for argument
Three days
Max argument characters
10,000
Voting period
One month
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Contender / Con
12
1592
rating
14
debates
78.57%
won
Description

TERMS

Resolved: It is probable that God exists.

Rounds:

1. Opening
2. Clash
3. Clash
4. Closing arguments/clash

For the purposes of this debate, the term "God" will be defined broadly as to include the general 4'Os (omniscient, omnipresent, omnipotent, and omnibenevolent being) who is the source of creation.) That is to say, I am not referring to any specific deity. Hence religious texts and religious doctrines are irrelevant to the debate. .

The time limit between replies is 72 hours. If special circumstances arise, one side may ask the other to wait out his or her remaining time. If one side explicitly concedes or violates any of these terms, then all seven points will be awarded to the other. By accepting this challenge, you agree to these terms.

The burden of proof is shared. It is incumbent on me to show that God's existence is probable, and it is incumbent on my opponent to show that God's existence is not probable. It is thus not enough to simply refute my arguments. My opponent must also erect his own case against the probability of God's existence.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

RFD starts here and continues in the comments at #95

-Arguments-
The definition in the debate description for god is the general 4'Os, omniscient, omnipresent, omnipotent, and omnibenevolent being who is the source of creation, but a) the definitions and rules of the debate are not binding on voters and b) how Pro decided to interpret and employ the definition of god is understood to be a request to voters to use Pro’s broader interpretation of god or as Pro puts it,
“for the purposes of this debate, the term "God" will be defined broadly” and that “Con completely misunderstands what we mean when philosophers say that God is Omnipotent…God is bound by his own nature and cannot do the illogical.”
This means that I’m weighing the 4 O’s with this definition that Pro obliquely requested voters to use.

Con tries to appeal to the definitions of the debate, but again, given Pro’s request, I’m overlooking things that Con says like “If you buy the arguments I present with in my case regarding the 4 O's, it is not possible that God, AS HE HAS BEEN DEFINED, exists.”
So what if he was defined that way?
Pro shows that philosophers look at omnipotence differently and so THIS is how I have to weigh my vote.

Con continues to stomp his feet, demanding that Pro is failing to meet Pro’s burden because of definitions.
Con said things like “Since God WAS DEFINED using the 4 O's, Pro must prove that a being composed of each of those 4 O's is probable,”
Pro already explained what he had to prove philosophically and Con just resorted to demanding certain definitions be followed rather than “broadly” as Pro requested.
Con persists to near nauseum “Moreover, it seems that the property which would allow God to be in all possible universes is omnipresence, SINCE WE HAVE NOT DEFINED God as "maximally great."
By this point it seems like Con was harassing voters to follow the definitions he finds suitable to his case, rather than the definitions requested by the debate’s instigator within the debate.

Here are more examples of Con simply appealing to definitions.
“If God is not omnipotent, then God, AS DEFINED, does not exist and Con wins…because my case shows that God's existence (as he was defined) is not possible, the ontological argument fails…Finally, on omnibenevolence, as I've said before, WE NEVER DEFINED god as maximally great…”

Since literally all of Con’s contentions with each of the 4 Os are based around Con’s desperate appeal to “agreed on” definitions of the debate to bolster an otherwise unsuccessful attack on the broader definition that Pro requests voters to use, Pro’s proof of god remains untouched and I buy that broadly, this philosophically 4 O creator of the universe satisfies a source of creation.

Pro's proof of probability of god is numbered.
1. Ontological Argument:
Maximally great is possible-->every possible world-->every actual world-->maximally great exists, contradictory entities impossible, contingent like humans exist in some worlds, necessary entities logic/math independent of universe
*Con, using an arbitrarily restrictive interpretation of god fails to combat that this argument in fact satisfies omnibenevolence (maximally great in goodness), omnipotence (maximally great in power), omniscience (maximally great in knowledge), and omnipresence (maximally great in existence) in one fell swoop, because given Pro’s interpretation of god and Pro’s request for voters to interpret god to be how Pro is employing god’s use in the debate, Con’s refuting shadows by saying things like “Would not a maximally great being be one who could render the ontological argument false?”
Con ignores Pro’s request to voters to view god in the philosophical sense, i.e. cannot violate logical arguments, and so Pro wins the ontological argument because Con basically refuted a strawman god, not Pro’s requested god.

2. KCA
All things that begin to exist have cause -->universe has a cause-->that’s god.
*Con AGAIN can only appeal to definitions not requested in the debate by Pro, “The first premise of the KCA is not analytically self-evident, because it is conceivable that something could begin without a cause, i.e. because "begin" is NOT DEFINITIONALLY identical to "caused."
I really thought Con would try to argue something different here, but no, just appeals to definitions.
This also leaves me buying that the universe did begin to exist and that its cause didn’t begin to exist and thus has no cause because to buy Con’s attacks, I have to accept only the definitions that Con uses, and this is very restrictive on me as a voter, especially since Pro already requested a philosophical interpretation of god.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

I had considered making a much longer RFD, though in this case, I don't feel that that is necessary. Frankly, Pro is just leaving way too much on the table with his responses, and it cost him dearly. The easiest place for me to vote is on the Kritik, as Pro largely leaves this untouched, choosing instead to post a dismissive couple of points in R2 that simply don't do him any favors. The point about theistic and atheistic predictions has nothing to do with defining what God is, it's just a statement that we can argue about how the world should appear. So this point is in no way responsive to a K that focuses entirely on our ability to define God directly. Similarly, as Con points out, the ontological argument in no way combats this point, nor does the statement that "we can know God's existence through both pure logic and through empirical evidence." All of this just blatantly ignores the text of the K, which leaves me to do little but weigh the Kritik, which functions a priori in the debate. Even if I accept the ontological argument, a K, by necessity, comes before any discussion of whether God exists, even through this lens. I buy all of the impacts and the voting issues and, without even considering their weight, they automatically force me to pull the trigger for Con.

For the sake of argument, though, I will say that I felt many of Con's other points were under-covered, misunderstood and mishandled. Particularly the argument over omniscience and omnibenevolence are quite convincing, largely because Pro's own arguments barely cover omnibenevolence as a factor (and seem to ignore the inherent discrepancy between free will and allowing evil, which is a point he largely drops). I either buy that free will doesn't exist, in which case I buy the omnicience point, or I buy that free will does exist and necessitates that objective evils occur, which means I buy the omniscience point. Even if I buy every point Pro has made, simply by buying one of these two arguments, I'm forced to agree that whatever deity is possible is not logically capable of carrying one of these two traits, which means it doesn't meet the definition Pro established at the beginning of the debate. That's also sufficient reason for me to vote Con.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

RFD in comments starting here: https://www.debateart.com/debates/376?open_tab=comments&comments_page=1&comment_number=79