Throughout history, we have a couple of problems where we came from, and how we get there. It all results in the problem of the existence of God. In the times of Christianity, Judaism, and Muslim, the existence of God has never been questioned. The problem of the existence of God comes from our new way of thinking after these religions. Science makes us think about how things work in our world and casts doubts on the existence of God. Since Jesus did not do scientific research on the day to prove that God existed, the people of history got the concept of God from where.
In this article, I will explain how Descartes uses his existence to prove the existence of God. It is based on "I think that God's thought is in my heart" and "I think so". - First of all, I must say that God believes that he has a universal church, the church of God. To my knowledge, many of the people who claim to be God's saints are not.
Discussion of Rene Descartes on the existence of God Rene Descartes's debate about the existence of God is related to his rationalistic deduction reasoning. Descartes concluded that the truth about the existence of God exists in His idea about the completeness of God and the essence of God (as a complete existence that must exist to be perfect). - All moral arguments about the existence of God are based on the principle that all of us share common sense of morality. Despite cultural differences, in a broad sense, people all over the world have ambiguous thoughts about right and wrong; a moral argument to the existence of God is that this mutual understanding is evidence of the existence of God I will say that. Immanuel Kant advocated this argument (not a moral argument); a god as a source of objective morality
A geometric argument to derive the nature of an object from that concept or concept suggests to Descart that a person may infer the existence of God from the concept or concept of God. (The argument about the existence of God is called an ontological argument, these arguments were originally proposed by St. Anselm of Canterbury in the 11th century.) Descartes 'description of Descartes' ontological argument listed. How persuasive is Descartes? Is it convincing like a mathematical demonstration? Is it convincing like Cogito?