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{{Short description|Argument for the existence of God}}
{{Descartes}}
The '''trademark argument'''<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.oxfordreference.com/display/10.1093/oi/authority.20110803105212460;jsessionid=15F721D46D9188DBA5ED795F13FB6644|title=trademark argument|work=[[The Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy]]|access-date=May 2, 2023}}</ref> is an ''[[a priori and a posteriori|a priori]]'' [[argument]] for the [[existence of God]] developed by the French philosopher and mathematician [[René Descartes]]. The name derives from the fact that the idea of God existing in each person "is the trademark, hallmark or stamp of their divine creator".<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RnnHAgAAQBAJ&pg=PT61|page=61|title=The God Confusion – Why Nobody Knows the Answer to the Ultimate Question|author=[[Gary Cox (philosopher)|Gary Cox]]|year=2013|publisher=[[Bloomsbury Publishing]]|isbn=9781623569808|quote=This has come to be known as the trademark argument as it claims that each person's idea of God is the trademark, hallmark or stamp of their divine creator}}</ref>
 
In the [[Meditations on First Philosophy|''Meditations'']] Descartes provides two arguments for the existence of God. In Meditation V he presents a version of the [[ontological argument]] which attempts to deduce the existence of God from the nature of God; in Meditation III he presents an argument for the existence of God from one of the effects of God's activity. Descartes cannot start with the existence of the world or with some feature of the world for, at this stage of his argument, he has not established that the world exists. Instead, he starts with the fact that he has an idea of God and concludes "that the mere fact that I exist and have within me an idea of a most perfect being, that is, God, provides a very clear proof that God indeed exists." He says, "it is no surprise that God, in creating me, should have placed this idea in me to be, as it were, the mark of the craftsman stamped on his work."
The '''trademark argument''' is an ''[[a priori and a posteriori|a priori]]'' [[argument]] for the [[existence of God]] developed by French philosopher and mathematician, [[René Descartes]]. The argument, though similar to the [[ontological argument]], differs in some respects, since it seeks to prove the existence of God through the [[causal adequacy principle]] (CAP) as opposed to analysing the definition of the word God.
 
==Underlying assumptions==
:{{cquote|[S]ince I am a thinking thing, and have in me an idea of God, whatever finally the cause may be to which my nature is attributed, it must necessarily be admitted that the cause must equally be a thinking thing, and possess within it the idea of all the perfections that I attribute to the divine nature.|15px|15px|René Descartes|''[[Meditations on First Philosophy]]''}}
To understand Descartes' argument it is necessary to understand some of the metaphysical assumptions that Descartes is using.
The trademark argument can be analyzed (or rationally reconstructed) as follows:
<br />
<br />1. I have an idea of God.
<br />2. Everything which exists has a cause.
<br />3. Therefore, there is a cause of my idea of God.
<br />
<br />3. There is a cause of my idea of God.
<br />4. The cause of an effect must contain at least as much reality as the effect.
<br />5. Therefore, the cause of my idea of God must contain at least as much reality as my idea of God.
<br />
<br />5. The cause of my idea of God must contain at least as much reality as my idea of God.
<br />6. The idea of God contains perfection.
<br />7. Therefore, the cause of my idea of God must contain perfection.
<br />
<br />7. The cause of my idea of God must contain perfection.
<br />8. No being which is not God contains perfection.
<br />9. God is the cause of my idea.
<br />
<br />9. The cause of my idea of God is God.
<br />10. If something is the cause of something else, that something exists.
<br />11. Therefore, God exists.
 
===Degrees of reality===
Descartes says,
 
{{quote|Undoubtedly, the ideas which represent substances to me amount to something more and, so to speak, contain within themselves more objective reality than the ideas which merely represent modes or accidents. Again, the idea that gives me my understanding of a supreme God…certainly has in it more objective reality than the ideas that represent finite substances. Now it is manifest by the natural light that there must be at least as much reality in the efficient and total cause as in the effect of that cause. For where, I ask, could the effect get its reality from, if not from the cause? And how could the cause give it to the effect unless it possessed it? It follows from this both that something cannot arise from nothing, and also that what is more perfect—that is, contains in itself more reality—cannot arise from what is less perfect.}}
 
Descartes goes on to describe this as 'transparently true'. Commenting on this passage Williams says, "This is a piece of scholastic metaphysics, and it is one of the most striking indications of the historical gap that exists between Descartes' thought and our own, despite the modern reality of much else that he writes, that he can unblinkingly accept this unintuitive and barely comprehensible principle as self-evident in the light of reason."<ref name="Williams 2014">{{cite book | last=Williams | first=Bernard | title=Descartes: The Project of Pure Enquiry (Routledge Classics | publisher=Routledge | location=Cambridge | year=1996 | isbn=1-138-01918-6}}</ref>{{rp|120}}
The Trademark Argument could also be constructed as such:
 
In his own time, it was challenged by Hobbes who in the Objections says,
"Moreover, M. Descartes should consider afresh what 'more reality' means. Does reality admit of more and less? Or does he think one thing can be more of a thing than another? If so, he should consider how this can be explained to us with that degree of clarity that every demonstration calls for, and which he himself has employed elsewhere."<ref name="Cottingham et al. 1984">{{cite book | first1=John | last1=Cottingham | first2=Robert | last2=Stoothoff | first3=Dugald | last3=Murdoch | title=The philosophical writings of Descartes vol2| publisher=Cambridge University Press | location=Cambridge | year=1984 | isbn=0-521-24595-8}}</ref>{{rp|130}}
 
To this Descartes replies:
<br />P1. We have ideas of many things
 
"I have … made it quite clear how reality admits of more and less. A substance is more of a thing than a mode; if there are real qualities or incomplete substances, they are things to a greater extent than modes, but to a lesser extent than complete substances; and, finally, if there is an infinite and independent substance, it is more of a thing than a finite and dependent substance. All this is completely self-evident."<ref name="Cottingham et al. 1984" />{{rp|130}}
<br />P2. These ideas must arise either from ourselves or from things outside of us.
 
To understand Descartes' Trademark Argument it is not necessary to fully understand the underlying Aristotelian metaphysics but it is necessary to know that
<br />P3. One of these ideas is the idea of God a (Necessary, Perfect Being)
* an infinite substance has the most reality and more reality than
* a finite substance, which in turn has more reality than
* a mode.<ref name="Hatfield 2003">{{cite book | last=Hatfield | first=Gary | title=Descartes and the Meditations | publisher=Routledge | location=London | year=2003 | isbn=0-415-11193-5}}</ref>{{rp|160}}
A substance is something that exists independently.<ref name="Hatfield 2003" />{{rp|158}} The only thing that truly exists independently is an infinite substance for it does not rely on anything else for its existence. In this context 'infinite substance' means 'God'. A finite substance can exist independently other than its reliance on an infinite substance. 'Substance' does not imply 'physical substance' — for Descartes the body is one substance but the mind is also a substance.
 
A 'mode' is "a way or manner in which something occurs or is experienced, expressed, or done."<ref>{{cite web |url= https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/mode |title= Oxford Living Dictionaries |author=<!--Not stated--> |date=2017 |publisher=Oxford University Press |access-date= 16 July 2017 }}{{dead link|date=September 2022|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> In this scheme, a substance (e.g. a mind) will have an attribute (thought) and the mode might be willing or having an idea.<ref name="Hatfield 2003"/>{{rp|158}}
<br />P4. This idea could not have been caused by ourselves, because we know ourselves to be limited and imperfect, and no effect is greater than it’s cause.
 
The degree of reality is related to the way in which something is dependent—"Modes are logically dependent on substance; they 'inhere in it as subject.'... Created substances are not logically, but causally, dependent on God. They do not inhere in God as subject, but are effects of God as creator."<ref name="Kenny 1993">{{cite book | last=Kenny | first=Anthony | title=Descartes A Study of his Philosophy | publisher=Random House | location=New York | year=1968 | isbn=0-394-30665-1 | url-access=registration | url=https://archive.org/details/descartesstudyof00kenn }}</ref>{{rp|134}}
<br />P5. Therefore the idea must have been caused by something outside of us that has nothing less than the qualities contained in the idea of God.
 
To avoid confusion, it is important to note that the degree of reality is not related to size—a bowling ball does not have more reality than a table tennis ball; a forest fire does not have more reality than a candle flame.
<br />P6. But only God has these properties.
 
===Formal reality and Objective reality===
<br />P7. Therefore God must be the cause of the idea we have of him.
 
Descartes says,
<br />C. Therefore God exists
 
{{quote|The nature of an idea is such that of itself it requires no formal reality except what it derives from my thought, of which it is a mode. But in order for a given idea to contain such and such objective reality, it must surely derive it from some cause which contains at least as much formal reality as there is objective reality in the idea.}}
This version of the argument evades much of the criticisms one normally sees against the first version of trademark argument, because to reject premise 2 is to reject a priori justification altogether. It is stating that we can know a priori truths even though we are imperfect, which is fine, because we can understand many things about reality through conceptual analysis.
 
'Formal reality' is roughly what we mean by 'actually existing.'<ref name="Hatfield 2003"/>{{rp|159}} 'Objective reality' does not mean objective as opposed to subjective but is more like the object of one's thoughts irrespective of whether or not it actually exists.<ref name="Williams 2014" />{{rp|123}} Cottingham says that 'objective reality' is the 'representational content of an idea'.<ref name="Cottingham 1986">{{cite book | first=John | last=Cottingham | title=Descartes | publisher=Blackwell | location=Oxford | year=1986 | isbn=0-631-15046-3}}</ref>{{rp|49}} Hatfield says "think of an "object" of desire – a championship for your favorite sports team, say. It may not now exist, and it need never have existed. In Descartes' terminology, what has "objective reality" is something contained in the subject's mental state and so may even be called "subjective" in present-day terms."<ref name="Hatfield 2003"/>{{rp|159}}
== Criticisms of the trademark argument ==
{{Unreferenced-section|date=November 2006}}
*The CAP compares the cause of ideas to the cause of objects, but, whereas objects often have straightforward causes, ideas do not.
* The idea of God contains only the idea of perfection, not perfection itself.
*[[Gaunilo]] - I may have the concept of a perfect island. The perfection of this island would imply that it would exist; however, this is not the case. A concept of something does not make it exist by adding the attribute of perfection.
*[[David Hume]] – The idea of God could be arrived at by considering qualities within oneself (wisdom, strength, goodness) and magnifying them.
*Descartes states that for the idea of the trademark argument to work, we must have a clear and distinct idea of God, i.e. a personal, infinite, monotheistic God. Descartes states that everyone is born with some kind of concept of God, no matter how broad it is. If we reach another idea of god, other than the traditional monotheistic one, Descartes would argue that the idea of God we have reached is not the idea of the clear and distinct God that we are looking for - however, he says that by looking closer we can show people that the idea of the god that they have been thinking of is actually, underneath, really the idea of God. However, if it is necessary to show people where they have reasoned wrongly, then the idea of God is not innate, as they have not reached it of their own accord.
* The idea a man has of perfection is itself imperfect. If one were to ask a man to describe perfection, it is impossible that his description could be accurate. If man's idea of perfection came from a perfect God, it would follow that his idea of perfection itself be perfect. Since the idea of perfection is imperfect, it is more reasonable to assume that it might have come from other imperfect sources.
 
Crucial to Descartes argument is the way in which the levels of objective reality are determined. The level of objective reality is determined by the formal reality of what is being represented or thought about. So every idea I have has the lowest level of '''''formal''''' reality, for every idea is a mode, but the idea of an infinite substance has more '''''objective''''' reality than the idea of a finite substance.<ref name="Williams 2014"/>{{rp|125}} Kenny notes, "we sometimes use the word 'reality' to distinguish fact from fiction: on this view, the idea of a lion would have more objective reality than the idea of a unicorn since lions exist and unicorns do not. But this is not what Descartes means."<ref name="Kenny 1993" />{{rp|133}} In this instance the idea of a lion and the idea of a unicorn would have the same objective reality because a lion and a unicorn (if it existed) would both be finite substances.
==Objections to the criticisms==
 
==Applying the causal adequacy principle==
* Ideas can have straightforward causes, if they didn't then we can never justify whether or not our brains were the cause of our ideas. To say that ideas don't have straightforward causes is to accept absurdities such as conceding the possibility that our ideas just pop into existence uncaused.
 
Using the above ideas Descartes can claim that it is obvious that there must be at least as much reality in the cause as in the effect for if there was not you would be getting something from nothing. He says "the idea of heat, or of a stone, cannot exist in me unless it is put there by some cause which contains at least as much reality as I conceive to be in the heat or in the stone. For although this cause does not transfer any of its actual or formal reality to my idea, it should not on that account be supposed that it must be less real."
* The idea of a God can definitely be arrived at by a Rationalist epistemology. Edward Feser (who ultimately rejects the trademark argument) has responded to something similar when he states that
 
Since the idea of God contains the level of (objective) reality appropriate to an infinite substance it is legitimate to ask where an idea with this level of reality came from. After considering various options Descartes concludes that it must come from a substance that has at least the same level of (formal) reality. Therefore, an infinite substance, i.e. God, must exist.
''But there are, nevertheless, some serious objections that can be raised against the trademark argument. An objection that Descartes himself considers is that he could have arrived at the idea of God all by himself merely by negating the idea of what is finite. For example, he could start with the idea of knowledge, which he has to a limited degree, and negate those limits so as to arrive at the idea of omniscience. But Descartes responds that this has things backwards: In his view, the idea of what is finite itself presupposes the idea of what is infinite, just as a boundary presupposes a larger expanse outside the boundary. (Compare: The notion of an imperfect circle presupposes the idea of a circle, which just is the idea of a perfect circle.'' <ref> http://edwardfeser.blogspot.com/2011/04/descartes-trademark-argument.html. </ref>
 
==Outline of Descartes' argument==
* Guanilo makes a category error as an island does not imply whether or not the act of being an island (having the property of islandness) entails necessity. Necessity is an essential property of God which ultimately leads to being a perfection that is better to have than to lack. An essential property of a being is a property that that being cannot possibly lack; a property without which it could not exist. A being is necessary if it is impossible for it not to exist. An island is also something that has a material nature, and any material nature must take up space in order to exist, so how could an island be necessary if it relies on matter being a certain way for its existence? This criticism misses the mark.
* My ideas may be innate, adventitious (i.e. come from outside me), or have been invented by me. As yet I don't know their true origin.
* If ideas are considered simply as modes of thought, they are all equal and appear to come from within me; in so far as different ideas represent different things they differ widely. Ideas which represent substances contain within themselves more objective reality than the ideas which merely represent modes; the idea that gives me my understanding of a supreme God, (eternal, infinite, etc.) has more objective reality than the ideas that represent finite substances.
* It is manifest by the natural light that there must be at least as much reality in the efficient and total cause as in the effect of that cause.
* It follows from this both that something cannot arise from nothing, and also that what contains more reality cannot arise from what contains less reality. And this applies not only when considering formal reality, but also when considering objective reality.
* Although the reality in my ideas is merely objective reality what ultimately causes those ideas must contain the same formal reality. Although one idea may originate from another, there cannot be an infinite regress here; eventually one must reach a primary idea, the cause of which will contain formally all the reality which is present only objectively in the idea.
* Ideas are like pictures which can easily fall short of the perfection of the things from which they are taken, but which cannot contain anything greater or more perfect.
* If the objective reality of any of my ideas turns out to be so great that I am sure the same reality does not reside in me, either formally or eminently (i.e. potentially), and hence that I myself cannot be its cause, it will necessarily follow that I am not alone in the world, but that some other thing which is the cause of this idea also exists.
* In addition to being aware of myself, I have other ideas— of God, corporeal and inanimate things, angels, animals and other men like myself. Except for the idea of God, it doesn't seem impossible that these ideas originated from within myself.
* By the word 'God' I understand a substance that is infinite, eternal, immutable, etc. These attributes are such that it doesn't seem possible for them to have originated from me alone. So from what has been said it must be concluded that God necessarily exists.
 
Further considerations:
* David Hume forgets that the property of necessity cannot be applied to oneself, so his argument is incomplete. Humans are contingent beings and therefore Hume leaves out one of the most important essential properties of God. Hume also begs the question and assumes nominalism with respect to wisdom, strength and goodness as being human traits. The trademark argument speaks of ideas which exist independently of human thinking, so to say that (wisdom, strength and goodness) are human traits is to assume that these traits only exist within humans.
 
* Although I have the idea of substance in me by virtue of being a substance, this does not account for my having the idea of an infinite substance, when I am finite. This idea must have come from some substance which really was infinite.
*If the justification of being clear and distinct relies on getting to a point where we don't show people where they reasoned wrongly then we might as well throw out the idea of truth itself since there is a such a division on what truth is. There are many different theories of truth (pragmatism, correspondence theory, coherence theory) so should we come to the conclusion that knowing what truth entails is not innate? Someone can have a clear and distinct idea of the truth and be right, and someone can think that they have a clear and distinct idea of the truth and be wrong, however both ideas have to assume that truth in some way exists. Descartes knows that people have a difference of opinion with respect to what God is and this is why he disagreed with Theists before his time. What is he saying is that we can understand the essential properties of what God is, and he is correct. God consists of a consciousness, and is a necessary being. To leave out these two traits is to end up speaking of something that is not a God.
* I cannot have gained the idea of the infinite merely by negating the finite. On the contrary, to know that I am finite means knowing that I lack something and so must first have the idea of the infinite to make that comparison.
* The perfections which I attribute to God do not exist in me potentially. It is true that I have many potentialities which are not yet actual but this irrelevant to the idea of God, which contains absolutely nothing that is potential. It might be thought that my gradual increase in knowledge could continue to infinity but firstly, this gradual increase in knowledge is itself a sign of imperfection and, secondly, God I take to be actually infinite, so that nothing can be added to his perfection whereas increasing knowledge will never reach the point where it is not capable of a further increase. Finally, the objective being of an idea cannot be produced merely by potential being, which strictly speaking is nothing, but only by actual or formal being.
 
Additional argument for the existence of God:
*It makes no sense to say that man can't describe what perfection is, but yet at the same time assume that man's idea of perfection is therefore imperfect, This is a self-refuting statement. If we don't know what the idea of perfection entails then how does it follow that we know what the idea of imperfection is?
 
* I couldn't exist as the kind of thing that has this idea of God if God didn't exist, for I didn't create myself, I haven't always existed, and, although there may be a series of causes that led to my existence, the ultimate cause must be such that it could give me the idea of God and this, for the reasons already given, will be God.
All these criticisms above end up being unpersuasive.
* This idea of God didn't come to me via the senses, nor did I invent this idea for I am plainly unable either to take away anything from it or to add anything to it. The only remaining alternative is that it is innate in me.
 
== Criticisms of the trademark argument ==
Cunning notes that "Commentators have argued that there is not much hope for the argument from objective reality."<ref name="Cunning 2010">{{cite book | first=David | last=Cunning | title=Argument and Persuasion in Descartes' Meditations | publisher= Oxford University Press | location=Oxford | year=2010 | isbn=978-0-19-539960-8}}</ref>{{rp|112}} Wilson says that she will say little about Descartes arguments for the existence of God for "while these arguments are interesting enough, I don’t think Descartes is in a position to defend their soundness very forcefully."<ref name="Wilson 1960">{{cite book | last=Wilson | first=Margaret | title=Descartes | publisher=Popular Prakashan Private Ltd | location=Bombay | year=1960 }}</ref>{{rp|100}} Williams comments that "Descartes took these hopeless arguments for the existence of God to be self-evidently valid, conditioned in this by historical and perhaps also by temperamental factors."<ref name="Williams 2014"/>{{rp|196}}
 
Hobbes' complaint that Descartes has not offered an adequate account of degrees of reality does not seem to have been answered and Descartes' response that it is 'self-evident' surely is not enough. There may be some superficial appeal in the claim that an actual flower has more reality than an idea of a flower but this needs to be unpacked. 'Reality' cannot be equated with 'existence' for, apart from the fact that 'degrees of existence' is hardly less problematic than 'degrees of reality', as Wilson comments, "reality must not be confused with existence: otherwise the existence of God would be overtly assumed in the premises of the argument."<ref name="Wilson 1960" />{{rp|137}}
 
Even if the argument is judged on its own terms and we grant that there can be degrees of formal reality and degrees of objective reality there are still significant problems. Crucial to the argument as it is normally reconstructed is that the degree of objective reality is determined by the degree of formal reality that the thing being thought about would have if it existed. Descartes offers no reason why this should be so. Wilson says, "Descartes has simply made an arbitrary stipulation here."<ref name="Wilson 1960"/>{{rp|137}} There seems to be no good reason why we could not maintain different degrees of objective reality but insist that the idea of an infinite substance still has less reality than the amount of reality conferred by the formal reality of a finite substance.
 
Descartes may be inconsistent on this point for in the ''Replies'' he says of objective existence, "this mode of being is of course much less perfect than that possessed by things which exist outside the intellect; but, as I did explain, it is not therefore simply nothing."<ref name="Cottingham et al. 1984"/>{{rp|75}} Despite what Descartes appears to say in the ''Meditations'' it may be necessary for the objective reality to be less than the formal reality of the thing represented. Williams points out, "God, as the argument insists, has more reality or perfection than anything else whatever. Hence if Descartes' idea of God is not itself God (which would of course be absurd), it cannot, however regarded, possess as much reality as God, and hence cannot demand as much reality in its cause as God possesses. So the argument seems to fall short of positing God as cause of the idea."<ref name="Williams 2014"/>{{rp|128}} He goes on to say that Descartes must, therefore be relying on something more than the general principle that there must be as much formal reality in the cause of an idea as there is objective reality in the idea itself. Instead, he suggests, Descartes is relying on special features of the idea of God: "the infinity and perfection of God, represented in his idea, are of such a special character, so far in excess of any other possible cause, that the only thing adequate to produce an idea of that would be the thing itself, God."<ref name="Williams 2014"/>{{rp|128}}
 
Then there is the problem of how it can be possible for a finite mind to have a clear and distinct idea of an infinite God. Descartes was challenged on this and in the first set of ''Replies'' says, "the infinite, ''qua'' infinite, can in no way be grasped. But it can still be understood, in so far as we can clearly and distinctly understand that something is such that no limitations can be found in it, and this amounts to understanding clearly that it is infinite."<ref name="Cottingham et al. 1984"/>{{rp|81}} Cottingham argues that making this distinction is "an unsatisfactory line of defence".<ref name="Cottingham 1986"/>{{rp|129}} He refers to Descartes own analogy of a man who had an idea of a very complex machine from which it could be inferred that he had either seen the machine, been told about the machine or was clever enough to invent it.<ref name="Cottingham et al. 1985">{{cite book | first1=John | last1=Cottingham | first2=Robert | last2=Stoothoff | first3=Dugald | last3=Murdoch | title=The philosophical writings of Descartes vol1| publisher=Cambridge University Press | location=Cambridge | year=1985 | isbn=0-521-63712-0}}</ref>{{rp|198}} He adds, "But clearly such inferences will hold only if the man has a quite determinate idea of the machine. If a man comes up and says that he has an idea of a marvellous machine which will feed the hungry by making proteins out of sand, I shall be impressed neither by his experience nor by his powers of invention if it turns out that that is all there is to the idea, and he has no conception, or only the haziest conception, of how such a machine might work."<ref name="Cottingham 1986" />{{rp|129}}
 
Finally, it might be added, for this proof to do the work Descartes is asking of it the proof needs to be clear and distinct. Given the above considerations this is unconvincing. In the second set of replies Descartes says this is the fault of the reader:
 
{{quote|I do not see what I can add to make it any clearer that the idea in question could not be present to my mind unless a supreme being existed. I can only say that it depends on the reader: if he attends carefully to what I have written he should be able to free himself from the preconceived opinions which may be eclipsing his natural light, and to accustom himself to believing in the primary notions, which are as evident and true as anything can be, in preference to opinions which are obscure and false, albeit fixed in the mind by long habit… I cannot force this truth on my readers if they are lazy, since it depends solely on their exercising their own powers of thought.<ref name="Cottingham et al. 1984"/>{{rp|97}}}}
 
==See also==
{{Portal|Philosophy}}
* [[ConflictCartesian thesisCircle]]
 
*[[Cartesian Circle]]
==References==
*[[Age of Enlightenment]]
{{reflist}}
*[[Faith and rationality]]
 
== Sources ==
* René Descartes, ''Meditations and Other Metaphysical Writings''
* Christopher Hamilton (2003), ''Understanding Philosophy''
* [http://www.school-portal.co.uk/GroupDownloadFile.asp?GroupId=9160&ResourceId=27354 school-portal.co.uk]
* [http://home.barton.ac.uk/curriculum/humanities/philosophy/as/unit3/Trademark%20Argument.doc Barton University]
* [http://www.faithnet.org.uk/Philosophy/Descartes/descartes_god.htm faithnet.org.uk]
 
{{Theology}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trademark Argument}}
[[Category:René Descartes]]
[[Category:Arguments for the existence of God]]
[[Category:René Descartes]]