Rethinking Anselm's Arguments: A Vindication of His Proof of the Existence of God (Anselm Studies and Texts #1)
Description
This book re-examines Anselm's famous arguments for the existence of God in his Proslogion, and in his Reply. It demonstrates how he validly deduces from plausible premises that God so truly exists that He could not be thought not to exist. Most commentators, ancient and modern, wrongly located his argument in a passage which is not about God at all. It becomes evident that, consequently, much contemporary criticism is based on misreading and misunderstanding his text. It reconstructs his reasoning through three distinct but logically connected stages. It shows that, even if Anselm's crucial premises are sceptically interpreted, his conclusions still follow. Properly understood, this argument is not vulnerable to the standard criticisms, including Gaunilo's 'Lost island' counter-example.
Other Books in Series
Eadmer of Canterbury: Life, History and Thought (Anselm Studies and Texts #10)
Anselm of Canterbury: Communities, Contemporaries and Criticism (Anselm Studies and Texts #3)
New Research on the Abbey of Le Bec in the Middle Ages: Sources, History, Archaeology (Anselm Studies and Texts #7)
Anselm of Canterbury: Nature, Order and the Divine (Anselm Studies and Texts #8)
New Readings of Anselm of Canterbury's Intellectual Methods (Anselm Studies and Texts #6)
Anselm and Scripture: The Bible in the Thought of Anselm of Canterbury (Anselm Studies and Texts #9)
A Cosmological Reformulation of Anselm's Proof That God Exists (Anselm Studies and Texts #5)
A Historical Study of Anselm's Proslogion: Argument, Devotion and Rhetoric (Anselm Studies and Texts #2)
