more from this thinker
|
more from this text
Single Idea 16007
[filed under theme 7. Existence / A. Nature of Existence / 5. Reason for Existence
]
Full Idea
I always reason from existence, not towards existence.
Gist of Idea
I assume existence, rather than reasoning towards it
Source
Søren Kierkegaard (Philosophical Fragments [1844], p.40)
Book Ref
Kierkegaard,Søren: 'Philosophical Fragments', ed/tr. Hong,Howard/Edna [Princeton 1983], p.40
A Reaction
Kierkegaard's important premise to help show that theistic proofs for God's existence don't actually prove existence, but develop the content of a conception. [SY]
The
18 ideas
with the same theme
[why do things (or anything at all) exist?]:
458
|
Nothing could come out of nothing, and existence could never completely cease
[Empedocles]
|
1707
|
Maybe necessity and non-necessity are the first principles of ontology
[Aristotle]
|
17179
|
There must always be a reason or cause why some triangle does or does not exist
[Spinoza]
|
19400
|
Possibles demand existence, so as many of them as possible must actually exist
[Leibniz]
|
19401
|
God's sufficient reason for choosing reality is in the fitness or perfection of possibilities
[Leibniz]
|
5062
|
First: there must be reasons; Second: why anything at all?; Third: why this?
[Leibniz]
|
7696
|
Leibniz first asked 'why is there something rather than nothing?'
[Leibniz, by Jacquette]
|
19341
|
There must be a straining towards existence in the essence of all possible things
[Leibniz]
|
19428
|
Because something does exist, there must be a drive in possible things towards existence
[Leibniz]
|
3942
|
I do not believe in the existence of anything, if I see no reason to believe it
[Berkeley]
|
5646
|
Hegel gives an ontological proof of the existence of everything
[Hegel, by Scruton]
|
16007
|
I assume existence, rather than reasoning towards it
[Kierkegaard]
|
7692
|
Being is maximal consistency
[Jacquette]
|
7687
|
Existence is completeness and consistency
[Jacquette]
|
19662
|
It is necessarily contingent that there is one thing rather than another - so something must exist
[Meillassoux]
|
17320
|
Either p is true or not-p is true, so something is true, so something exists
[Liggins]
|
19482
|
Current physics says matter and antimatter should have reduced to light at the big bang
[New Sci.]
|
19483
|
CP violation shows a decay imbalance in matter and antimatter, leading to matter's dominance
[New Sci.]
|