AkiThePirate wrote:...I fail to see how such a property proves the existence of a supreme being in the context of this or any other ontological argument...
Perhaps "Supreme Being" contains baggage which needn't concern us at the moment. Instead, the main idea is that there is metaphysical or supraphysical framework within which universes--our universe, of course, and perhaps any other conceivable universes--exist. Godel's proof seeks to determine what we can know about this metaphysical "framework for reality."
AkiThePirate wrote:...Could you outline how such properties show the existence of such a being?...
Ultimately, we are not discussing "a being," or "a thing" like all other "things," but rather a "framework for existence," a framework which can be seen as entailing those properties (of any and all conceivable universes) which we can identify as "non-arbitrary." If various non-arbitrary properties can be identified in various conceivable universes, then it is also possible to conceive of
some universe in which
all non-arbitrary properties can be identified (note that if it would be impossible for
all of those properties to exist in the
same universe, then one or more of our proposed properties is not "positive" or "non-arbitrary" at all; that is, we have made a mistake and must go back and correct it by eliminating the arbitrary properties which have somehow slipped past us). The metaphysical "framework" (henceforth referred to as "metaframe") must necessarily encapsulate or entail at least all of these non-arbitrary properties, and in this way we can obtain at least some partial information about our "metaframe."
AkiThePirate wrote:...Being honest, I can't actually agree with you that differentiation is a property in our universe...Quantum theory will mess up your philosophy...
Are you saying that there is no such thing as distinct fundamental particles?
At any rate, differentiation is entailed by the fact that we have multiple conceivable universes. The set of conceivable universes, all by itself, means that each universe is itself distinct, unique, and related by virtue of its membership in the set of universes which can be conceived.
AkiThePirate wrote:...I was of the opinion that it necessitated that existence was a property of this supreme being. If not, I fail to see how it's an argument at all...
Kant's objection that "Existence is not a predicate" is circumvented by Godel's use of set theory. He implicitly proposed a set of "all existent things." Anything which is placed into that set entails the property of "existence." Moreover, Godel further (implicitly) stipulated a subset of "all non-arbitrarily existent things." This subset does not include unicorns or hippos at all, since unicorn-ness or hippo-ness fail the axiomatic filter. The other "conceivable universes" do not act so much as license for unbridled imagination as instead a means for helping us to distinguish arbitrary from non-arbitrary properties.
To me, the real trick is to decide what belongs in the set of "existent things," as opposed to what belongs in the set of "non-existent things." I think that my superpositives, in conjuction with the filter of Axioms 2 through 4, work well to weed out arbitrariness. But what things actually are "existent"? That is the biggest question.
For example, we would place people, trees, rocks, water, oxygen, hydrogen, fire, fundamental particles, etc. into the set of "existent things." We would probably also place dinosaurs and dodo birds into the set as well, on the basis of their past existence. But what about things such as numbers? Rational numbers, irrational numbers, imaginary numbers, and so on. What about such things as truth, love, creativity, volition? Do these things belong in the set of existent things, or in the set of non-existent things? To me, this is the most difficult aspect of Godel's Ontological Proof.
In the end I have to adopt a pragmatic approach and say that numbers exist, as do other commonly used abstract or metaphysical concepts. These belong in the set of existent things, rather than in the set of non-existent things. From there, we eliminate the "arbitrarily existent things" from the set of "all existent things," so that we end up with the set of "all non-arbitrarily existent things." And this set of all non-arbitrary things provide us with some core of information about the metaframe which entails them.
To my thinking, the superpositives of
Existence,
Differentiation,
Relationality, and
Information--along with the "positives" of Consciousness, Volition, Creativity, and Love--are the only things that I can see existing non-arbitrarily. Therefore, these properties constitute the core of information that we can detect (on our own) about our metaframe.