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Thinkers In The Medieval Period Were Preoccupied With Proble

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Thinkers In The Medieval Period Were Preoccupied With Problems Surroun Thinkers In The Medieval Period Were Preoccupied With Problems Surroun Thinkers in the Medieval Period were preoccupied with problems surrounding the existence of God. Avicenna took up the problem of the necessity of God's existence. He solves the problem by resolving a series of issues surrounding it. Our reading this week provides a good explanation of his proof and does so in only one and a half pages of text. The shortness of this argument provides us with a good opportunity to examine a complex philosophical argument and to judge its effectiveness. The author of our text explains the argument step-by-step, and shares with us both the difficulties with each step and the insight it provides. For your assignment this week, in your own words, explain the problem Avicenna wishes to solve, and then paraphrase each of the steps in his argument and his final solution. What insights do the steps provide in our understanding of God? Can you think of any arguments that would counter Avicenna's claim? Submission: Must be a minimum of 1 1/2 pages with standard 1-inch margins in Times New Roman or Garamond font. Must be double-spaced. Must address the topic of the paper with critical thought. Must include in-text citations and references in MLA style. No outside resources. Name, course, and assignment top left. Include a Title.

Paper For Above instruction The philosophical problem Avicenna addresses revolves around the existence and necessity of God. During the Medieval Period, many thinkers sought to comprehend whether God's existence could be demonstrated through rational argumentation, particularly emphasizing that God's existence is necessary rather than contingent. Avicenna’s core aim is to provide a rational proof to establish that God's existence is not only real but necessary—meaning that God's non-existence is impossible. This effort aligns with the broader medieval preoccupation with understanding the divine through logical reasoning, bridging faith and reason. Avicenna’s argument unfolds in several structured steps. The first step concerns the distinction between possible beings and necessary beings. A possible being is one that might exist or might not; its existence depends on other factors or causes. A necessary being, by contrast, must exist; its non-existence is impossible because its existence is self-sufficient. The second step claims that there cannot be an infinite regress of causes: every being that exists must have arisen from a cause, but the chain of causes cannot go back infinitely because then the original cause would not be necessary, but merely dependent. Therefore,


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Thinkers In The Medieval Period Were Preoccupied With Proble by Dr Jack Online - Issuu