This blog post defends S5 modal logic by arguing that atheists should not reject its axioms merely to avoid the theistic conclusion of Plantinga-style modal ontological arguments. It does so by emphasizing that a modal ontological argument is, after all, an ontological argument: it moves from a certain substantive definitional claim about God to an affirmative existential claim about God. The real work in the argument is done by the substantive definitional claim, and the logic, regardless how strong of a modal logic it is, is just scaffolding. Or so I claim, and I defend this by recasting the modal ontological argument in a weaker modal logic with stronger premises, showing that the argument is still valid and can still be equally well motivated by informal conceptions of theism in this way, and then only afterwards comparing the argument with something that you’d need S5 to show. S5 is then seen to be a perfectly innocent, and delightfully accurate, model of how alethic modalities work in natural language, so that non-theists who would like to reject modal ontological arguments would be best served by either sticking to an agnostic or sceptical claim about theism or by adopting some theory that denies the very possibility of the truth of theism, rather than trying to make such strange, hard to interpret claims as that “God’s existence is contingent since it isn’t actual, but it could have been actual, in which case it would be necessary”.
I first came up with the central argument of this blog post on 2025-08-03, but the blog post came largely from a discussion on 2026-02-02 in which I used the argument to defend S5, much the same as in this blog post (in fact, a few words in this blog post were reused from the discussion).
1. Introduction
Alvin Plantinga famously considered his own modal ontological argument unconvincing. Maybe his pessimism about natural theology was warranted in some way, but it wasn’t helped by his needlessly overcomplicated presentation of the argument.
Plantinga’s argument, like all ontological arguments, moves from a substantive, definitional claim about God to an affirmative existential claim. But Plantinga took it for granted that he would be able to use the strongest modal logic, S5, and hence, like a logician seeking to use only the minimal necessary axioms, pared down his substantive understanding of God to a minimal claim that allowed S5 to do as much of the work of the proof as possible. This is perfectly fine if the argument is to remain academic, but naturally, since it is a proof-of-God, it made its way to apologists, who merely repeated Plantinga’s argument without deeper reflection on what was being said in it. This was the first time many atheists heard of modal logic, and many of them reflexively denied the S5 axioms instead of the premises, which is what the argument’s phrasing was meant to pressure them to do. But while modal logicians can laugh at atheists being made to look foolish by restricting themselves to a uselessly weak version of alethic modal logic, laypersons don’t really see what’s so funny about this. And I think it’s a dismal state of affairs, because I don’t want to be unable to use the nice, perfect, beautiful, S5 modal logic when modelling alethic modalities in my conversations with atheists, just because they’re afraid of Plantinga. Enough is enough.
In this blog post, I restate the modal ontological argument by using a weaker modal logic combined with a stronger substantive definitional claim about God, so as to make the background understanding of God explicit, and show that nothing is unusual about it. With this, I aim to show that the substantive definitional claim about God is the real core of the ontological argument, not anything about S5. I review the options for non-theists very thoroughly so as to make it clear that they really don’t need to deny S5, and there’s really no reason to do so. The main goal of this blog post, in summary, is to emphasize the advantages and innocence of S5, so as to show that S5, by itself, says nothing more than natural language intuitively says about alethic modalities, so that the core of any modal ontological argument is something else.
2. The argument restated
The argument uses classical propositional modal logic with axiom T, and uses g as a constant that means “God exists”. (Axiom T is the same as what is called Axiom M by the SEP, which seems to be an outlier on this.) The exposition uses the definition ◇p ≝ ¬□¬p freely, and also freely speaks of “theists” as believers in g and “atheists” as believers in ¬g, with “agnostics” being those who suspend judgment, and “sceptics” being those who deny that it is possible to know whether g is the case (more on this in section 3); “non-theists” are whichever persons aren’t theists, of course.
The argument is stated as follows:
- □g ∨ □¬g (premise)
- ¬(□¬g) (premise)
- □g (1,2 DS)
- g (3 via axiom T)
This all went by very fast, so I am going to explain it line-by-line.
2.1. Premise 1: God’s existence is not contingent
Premise 1 states that God’s existence is either necessary or impossible. This is to deny that God is a contingent being, in the sense that God might either have been or not have been. The negation of Premise 1 is ◇g ∧ ◇¬g, i.e., possibly God exists AND possibly God doesn’t exist. Theists who accept Premise 1 deny that it’s possible that God doesn’t exist, and atheists who accept Premise 1 deny that it’s possible that God exists. Hence, neither theism nor atheism are forced by Premise 1 by itself.
The motivation of Premise 1 for theists is that they accept one of the disjuncts. The motivation of Premise 1 for atheists is that, if they affirm ◇g ∧ ◇¬g, then it’s unclear that their statement ¬g is really denying the same thing that theists affirm. After all, theists conceive of God as a necessary being, not as a contingent being. If the atheist denies Premise 1, the theist is free to say that the atheist hasn’t really denied what he affirms.
The very use of “contingent” as standard modal terminology hints at this way of conceiving of necessary truths, since it comes from Leibnizian metaphysics. In the Leibnizian metaphysics, whenever you said something was “contingent”, you also said it was “contingent on” something else: the “things that might have been and might not have been” were coextensive with the “things that depend on something else for their existence”. Leibniz took this simply as a linguistic datum, and it went unquestioned for a long time (I’m still not sure who exactly questions it), because it just works with natural language so perfectly.
But affirming Premise 1 does not require a commitment to this thesis of Leibnizian metaphysics. Using “fundamental being” for beings that aren’t ontologically dependent, then we might say that, regardless whether Leibniz is right in saying that all-and-only fundamental beings are necessary beings, it remains that theists conceive of God as a necessary being, quite apart from whether theists conceive of God as a fundamental being (which I think they also do, but which the argument does not claim). If the atheist conceives of God as a contingent being, which might either be or not be, then the atheist is not meaning the same thing by “God” that the theist means by it.
I say that the theist conceives of God as a necessary being. There is, of course, no universal agreement among theists about anything, so which theist do I mean? Well, Alvin Plantinga, for one, certainly conceives of God as a necessary being, and hence accepts Premise 1. Leibniz, of course, also does. More generally, I can’t think of any theist in the history of philosophy or of religion who ever explicitly denied Premise 1, at least about the greatest god, although not all of them always explicitly affirmed it. The atheist who denies Premise 1 is being very weird, historically, and hence I think I am saying something very plausible in saying that he is not denying something that any theists affirm. So if the atheist wants to deny what theists affirm, he must accept Premise 1, and hence (if he wants to remain an atheist in the present sense, rather than an agnostic or sceptic) claim that God’s existence is impossible, not just “possible but not actual”. More on options for atheists in section 3.
2.2. Premise 2 (God’s existence is possible) and the derivation
Premise 2 states that God’s existence is not impossible. Together with Premise 1, this easily implies theism, of course. Plantinga also uses Premise 2, so this argument isn’t an improvement on Plantinga in this respect. The atheist is free to deny Premise 2 if he wants; this is discussed in section 3.
To be fully explicit in case someone can’t read the notation: Since Premise 1 said God’s existence is either necessary or impossible, and Premise 2 denied that it’s impossible, then by Disjunctive Syllogism you get that God’s existence is necessary, which is the proposition 3. Axiom T says that necessary propositions are actually true, hence from proposition 3, via axiom T, you get proposition 4. I don’t expect any of this derivation to be controversial, it’s the premises that are controversial.
3. Options for non-theists, and why rejecting S5 isn’t one
The argument did not use the full strength of the modal logic system S5; it relied more or less entirely on the fact that Premise 1 is required to capture the theist’s informal understanding of God.
Granted, it also used Axiom T. But Axiom T, unlike the more bespoke S5 axioms that involve iterated modalities, is certainly obviously true in natural language. When would you ever say that something is “necessarily true but not actually true”? This seems simply ungrammatical. Hence, Axiom T is an analytic truth.
3.1. How S5 enters into the argument, and why rejecting it is a bad idea
How does S5 even come into it, then? The answer may be surprising: S5 only comes into it if the atheist wants to accept Premise 2 (i.e., deny that God’s existence is impossible; together with atheism and Axiom T, this already implies the negation of Premise 1, but nevermind this for now) and furthermore affirm that, “if God had existed, then God would exist necessarily”, in the subjunctive mood, interpreted under a standard modal reading of subjunctives. S5 is then required to show that such an atheist is inconsistent, such that the subjunctive statement combined with Premise 2 would force theism. I will explain.
If the atheist merely wants to say, in the indicative mood, that “if God exists, then God exists necessarily”, then this can be interpreted as a mere material conditional, g → □g. Even for the atheist, this can coexist in a classical S5 model with ◇g (God’s existence is not impossible), because, since the atheist accepts ¬g, then accepting g would lead to inconsistency. In classical logic, “from a contradiction, anything follows”, and in particular, you have g → □g.
But if the atheist wants to say, in the subjunctive mood, “if God had existed, then God would exist necessarily”, then under a standard modal reading of subjunctive conditionals, S5 can show that this atheist cannot, as an atheist, grant that it is possible that God exists. This standard interpretation, seen for instance here and here, interprets a subjunctive statement “if A had been the case, then B would have been the case” as materially implying, at least, that ◇A → ◇B. So for the atheist who says, “if God had existed, then God would exist necessarily”, this amounts to ◇g → ◇□g. Combined with his commitment to ◇g from his acceptance of Premise 2, the atheist becomes committed to ◇□g. This is where the characteristic axiom of S5, which is called either Axiom 5 or Axiom E depending on the source, comes into play, which says that ◇□p → □p. Instantiating the scheme with g, you have ◇□g → □g. By modus ponens, you have □g, and then Axiom T yields the theistic conclusion, as before. So such an atheist would be inconsistent, committed to theism and atheism, under S5.
However, such an atheist is certainly inconsistent in a more ordinary way, not just given S5. If he claims that God’s existence is possible (given his acceptance of Premise 2) but not actual (given his acceptance of atheism), then he claims that God’s existence is contingent. (That is, atheism and Premise 2, together with Axiom T, commit him to the negation of Premise 1.) So it is simply very strange, in natural language, that he claims, about God’s existence, that “if this proposition were to be true, it would be a necessary truth”. If you were to ever say the just-quoted sentence about any other proposition in your life, certainly you would be saying it about something which is either a tautology or a contradiction, such as a mathematical conjecture, not about something contingent. It is very weird, in natural language, to say that a contingent proposition would be necessary if it were true. The modal translation, and the S5 axiom, are only capturing this reality about how language is used, not introducing anything out of the ordinary. The dispute is about the premises, not about S5.
S5 is the best formal model of natural alethic modal language. It corresponds to frames where the accessibility relation is reflexive, symmetric, and transitive, or equivalently, reflexive and Euclidean. This is simply how natural-language alethic modalities work, and there is really nothing else to use, if you want a model of alethic modalities in formal logic. There is no reason to weaken it. I encourage you to look further into modal logic with an open mind, without thinking so much about theistic arguments, so that you will see what I am talking about. (Do not confuse alethic modalities with other modalities, of course, such as epistemic, deontic, or temporal modalities, which I do not address here.)
3.2. The real live options for non-theists
If you don’t want to accept theism, your options are the following:
3.2.1. Agnosticism or scepticism
This is to suspend judgment on whether God exists (agnosticism), or alternatively, to claim that is impossible to know whether God exists (scepticism about theism). These can be challenged, but I don’t care to do so here.
3.2.2. Believe that God’s existence is impossible, and hence reject Premise 2
Since the ontological argument merely proves that there is a necessary being, the most direct way to do this is to deny that there are any necessary beings at all, which is certainly something some people have believed, such as David Hume; if there are no necessary beings, then any purported necessary being is impossible.
If the atheist wants to make a more modest claim, he can use the typical arguments that some particular version of God’s purported attributes leads to inconsistency, such as arguments from evil, or from the omnipotence paradox. Those arguments are, of course, tied to a specific notion of what God’s attributes are, which may be disputed by the theist. Alternatively, the atheist can restrict necessary beings in a more local way, such as by claiming that the only necessary beings are (for instance) mathematical objects, and God isn’t (for instance) a mathematical object. You need to motivate the restriction on necessary beings somehow, and the more kinds of necessary beings you allow, of course, the more room there is for theists to argue that God fits into one of your allowed kinds.
3.2.3. Dispute the theist’s definition
I am including this option for logical completeness: technically, you may reject Premise 1 and try, somehow, to answer the theist’s challenge that this does not capture his conception of God. You may claim that the theist does not really believe that it is impossible for God to fail to exist, despite his protestations to the contrary; you may try to interpret the religious and theological tradition as somehow best explained by a contingent view of God. I do not think this makes any sense, but I can’t let my blog post be anything but exhaustive.
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| Illustration for this blog post, drawn by Nano Banana. |




