Most people are not confused about their existence because they have neither witnessed nor experienced God. In Western theology there are three theories to prove the existence of God. These theories are ontological arguments, cosmological arguments, and objective arguments. St. Anselm in the 11th century and Descartes in the 17th century used ontology arguments to prove the existence of God. For them, God is supreme, "He does not need anything but needs all being and happiness" (PG.
Exploration of ontological arguments For about 1000 years, ontological arguments have attracted the attention of philosophers. The order of ontology arguments from thinking to reality is revolutionary. This is an argument that does not actually require a corresponding experiment and does not require empirical data for operation. - Early elements of cosmological argument were developed by world famous philosophers Plato and Aristotle between 400 and 200 BC. The medieval philosopher St. Thomas Aquinas extended their thoughts when writing "five ways" in the latter half of the 13 th century. Since that time, cosmological arguments have become one of the most widely accepted and critical arguments against the existence of God.
Immanuel Kant gives the traditional definition of ontological debate. He contrasts ontological arguments (indeed any discussion related to existence) to cosmological and physiological theoretical arguments. According to Kant, the ontological debate is an argument based on a priori reasoning. Graham Oppy defines the ontology as "the sole prerequisite of analysis, a priori and necessity" and "existence of God" that Graham Oppy thinks "there is no urgent reason to deviate from the traditional definition" It draws the view that it draws out the conclusions of. However, Oppy acknowledges that not all "ontological features" (analytical, necessity, priority) of ontology arguments are present in all ontology arguments. The definition of an ontological argument that "proposed a better point" would only take into account the consideration "within the scope of a perfect theological view of the theory".
An argument about the existence argument argument argument of God is an a priori argument. These arguments try to prove the existence of God from the meaning of the word God. Anselm of Canterbury introduced an ontological argument to his work 'Proslogion'. The classic argument of Anselm is based on two principles, the most important of which are St. Anselm and Rene de Carte of the above Canterbury. - Cosmological argument tries to prove the existence of God by showing that there are no myriad reasons for the existence of objects. It states that everything must have the last unresolved cause. The reason for this unknown reason is declared to be God. Such discussion is believed to be the reason for understanding us and the existence of the universe. There are several forms of cosmological argument, but basically it is as follows.