The Reason of Reason: How Reason, Logic, and Intelligibility Together are Evidence for God (Self Evident Things Book 1) by Scott Cherry

The Reason of Reason: How Reason, Logic, and Intelligibility Together are Evidence for God (Self Evident Things Book 1) by Scott Cherry

Author:Scott Cherry [Cherry, Scott]
Language: eng
Format: azw3, epub
Publisher: UNKNOWN
Published: 2017-08-11T04:00:00+00:00


Chapter 8

Objections to the Logos Principle, part 1

Now we come to some objections. There are always objections in philosophy, and they fall into two broad categories: those that assert the premises are not true, and those that assert they are not valid, or both. This demonstrates very nicely the main idea of the preceding discussion. Some may argue, for example, that the laws of logic such as Validity are an outgrowth of language or that they would have pre-existed God so that He could not have created them, similar to the Euthyphro dilemma about moral laws. In any case, no argument can be made without first presupposing the absoluteness of logic. My whole argument thus far is either logically valid or it is not. And this is precisely my point!



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