KANT.1
"Being is evidently not a real predicate, or a
concept of something that can be added to the concept of a thing. It is merely
the admission of a thing, and of certain determinations in it. Logically, it is
merely the copula of a judgment. The proposition, God is almighty,
contains two concepts, each having its object, namely, God and almightiness.
The small word is, is not an additional predicate, but only serves to
put the predicate in relation to the subject. If, then, I take the
subject (God) with all its predicates (including that of almightiness), and
say, God is, or there is a God, I do not put a new predicate to the
concept of God, but I only put the subject by itself, with all its predicates,
in relation to my concept, as its object. Both must contain exactly the same
kind of thing, and nothing can have been added to the concept, which expresses
possibility only, by my thinking its object as simply, given and saying, it is.
And thus the real does not contain more than the possible. A hundred real
dollars do not contain a penny more than a hundred possible dollars. For as the
latter signify
xvi |
"By whatever and by however many predicates I may think
a thing (even in completely determining it), nothing is really added to it, if
I add that the thing exists. Otherwise, it would not be the same that exists,
but something more than was contained in the concept, and I could not say that
the exact object of my concept existed. Nay, even if I were to think in a thing
all reality, except one, that one missing reality would not be supplied by my
saying that so defective a thing exists, but it would exist with the same
defect with which I thought it; or what exists would be different from what I
thought. If, then, I try to conceive a being, as the highest reality (without
any defect), the question still remains, whether it exists or not. For though
in my concept there may be wanting nothing of the possible real content of a
thing in general, something is wanting in its relation to my whole state of
thinking, namely, that the knowledge of that object should be possible
"Whatever, therefore, our concept of an object may
contain, we must always step outside it, in order to attribute to it existence.
With objects of the senses, this takes place through their connection with any
one of my perceptions, according to empirical laws;
xvii |
"The concept of a Supreme Being is, in many respects, a
very useful idea, but, being an idea only, it is quite incapable of increasing,
by itself alone, our knowledge with regard to what exists. It cannot even do so
much as to inform us any further as to its possibility. The analytical
characteristic of possibility, which consists in the absence of contradiction
in mere positions (realities), cannot be denied to it; but the connection of
all real properties in one and the same thing is a synthesis the possibility of
which we cannot judge
"Time and labor therefore are lost on the famous ontological (Cartesian) proof of the existence of a Supreme Being from mere concepts; and a man might as well imagine that he could become richer in knowledge by mere ideas, as a merchant in capital, if, in order to improve his position, he were to add a few noughts to his cash account."
1 Critique of Pure Reason. Translated by F. Max Muller. New York, 1896. P-483 et seq.