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    If the nonexistence of everything is impossible, then nec... — Carmelics
    Home/Natural Theology
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    Supports→It is necessarily the case that something exists.

    If the nonexistence of everything is impossible, then necessarily something exists.

    Modality & PossibilityNatural Theology
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    Natural TheologyModality & Possibility

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    Absolute nonexistence is unintelligible.If absolute nonexistence is unintelligible, then the nonexistence of everything ...It is necessarily the case that something exists.

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    It is impossible that nothing exists.93%If nothing else could exist in its place, then everything that never e...90%If absolute nonexistence is unintelligible, then the nonexistence of e...89%Existence and nonexistence (and their combinations) are the only possi...88%

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    SEP: hartshorne
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    He argues that Hume’s and Kant’s criticisms of the ontological argument of St. Anselm are not directed at the strongest version of his argument found in Proslogion, chapter 3. Here, he thinks, there is a modal distinction implied between existing necessarily and existing contingently. Hartshorne’s view is that existence alone might not be a real predicate, but existing necessarily certainly is. To say that something exists without the possibility of not existing is to say something significant a

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