
Alexander Carruth (ed.)
et al.
Published online:
22 November 2018
Published in print:
11 October 2018
Online ISBN:
9780191866807
Print ISBN:
9780198796299
Contents
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1. Ontological Arguments 1. Ontological Arguments
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2. E. J. Lowe’s New Modal Argument 2. E. J. Lowe’s New Modal Argument
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3. Lowe’s Definitions 3. Lowe’s Definitions
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4. Three of Lowe’s Premises 4. Three of Lowe’s Premises
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5. Against the Principle of Abstract Dependency 5. Against the Principle of Abstract Dependency
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6. Envoi 6. Envoi
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References References
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Chapter
8 Lowe’s New Ontological Argument
Get access
Pages
128–146
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Published:October 2018
Cite
van Inwagen, Peter, 'Lowe’s New Ontological Argument', in Alexander Carruth, Sophie Gibb, and John Heil (eds), Ontology, Modality, and Mind: Themes from the Metaphysics of E. J. Lowe (Oxford , 2018; online edn, Oxford Academic, 22 Nov. 2018), https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198796299.003.0009, accessed 6 May 2025.
Abstract
In ‘A New Modal Version of the Ontological Argument,’ E. J. Lowe has presented a version of the ontological argument that does not, like other versions of the modal argument, make use of a ‘possibility’ premise. (e.g. ‘It is possible for a perfect being to exist’.) Three of the premises of this carefully formulated argument are: some necessary abstract beings exist; all abstract beings are dependent beings; all dependent beings depend for their existence on independent beings. This chapter is an examination of the ‘interplay’ between these three premises and a defense of the author’s conviction that the second of them is false.
Subject
Metaphysics
Collection:
Oxford Scholarship Online
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