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A 4 page paper which examines the thoughts of three philosophers as it relates to the existence of God. The philosophers examined are Kant, Descartes, and Rousseau. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAgodph.rtf
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great philosophers in history are generally regarded as brilliant minds. The following paper examines the beliefs of Kant, Descartes, and Rousseau as it relates to their belief in God.
Is There a God?: Philosophers Kant - Kants work, Pure Reason, was designed to define the power and the scope of reason
itself (Gogan, 2006). "He defines reason and its proper scope in terms of the conditions of possible experience or the conditions of the possible cognition of objects" (Gogan, 2006). There
is a clear sense of the transcendental which establishes that there are particular rules and in this one could well argue the rules were God, or laid down by God
and his grand design of existence. This particular author indicates that his religious considerations directed him a problem associated with the ground for knowledge or rules (Gogan, 2006). "The concept
of a supreme ground or being is a problem that Kant must deal with, for he argues that we seem naturally to locate the ground of existence and possibility in
such a being" (Gogan, 2006). In terms of existence and reality Kant did see things as pre-existent or pre-given but he felt that
experiences were possible (Gogan, 2006). This author indicates this in the following: "Kant gets rid of the usual foundation for reality, that is, God, and replaces it with a web
of transcendental conditions" Such conditions involve intuition and understanding. (Gogan, 2006). With a belief that things were not pre-existent, combined with his belief in a systematic unity, wherein everything is
whole and logical to a great extent, Kant had a clear "argument for" the existence of God (Gogan, 2006). And, in this lies the foundation for the simple assumption of
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