[1] viXra:2012.0220 [pdf] replaced on 2020-12-31 10:32:26
Authors: Robert A. Herrmann
Comments: 8 Pages.
A "direct logical proof" for the existence of an "ultimate cause" has as its last line a statement
such as "Therefore, an ultimate cause exists." But, what type of "logic" is used to deduce this last line? Is it the propositional, predicate, modal, dialectic, or something else entirely? Then a paper and pencil proof requires some sort of axioms. What are these? Do the axioms state facts in a science-community sense, or are they just accepted by a theological-community? If such a proof is accepted, then does the ultimate cause correspond to a theological-community's description for God?
Category: Religion and Spiritualism