Trademark argument against the existence of Descartes' God (also known as causal assertion) seeks to prove the existence of God through our understanding of God. This argument depends on the definition of the cause and outcome of Descartes and he regards it as a priori. The idea that God is an infinite existence, his reason is essentially staying in our brain, as his seal and trademark is like a potter left in his flowerpot. "God put this idea into my mind in my creation, which may give the impression that workers are impressed with his work." This infinite idea is limited to human beings You must be born for the nature. Things can not appear, what is the idea?
Descartes' first argument about the existence of God is called a trademark allegation. This argument points out that we all have our own ideas in our minds ("... there is a truthful and positive thought about God or my idea ... "). As the designer left a mark, God must plant this idea in our hearts. "When I think more about this, my initial thought should not be surprised if my intelligence can not figure out why God is behaving like him, because I know that It is because I do not know what the reason is and how God produces them.
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