Classical theistic arguments frequently appeal to modal logic in an attempt to establish the existence of a necessary personal being. This paper offers a diagnostic analysis of why such arguments cannot succeed. We distinguish three types of necessity logical–analytic (Class A), modal–structural (Class B), and existential necessity (Class C) and show that formal modal systems are jurisdictionally confined to the first two. Claims of necessary existence exceed the expressive and justificatory capacity of modal logic. We demonstrate that even minimal epistemic openness suffices to collapse Class C necessity (Knife-Edge fragility), that strengthening modal systems amplifies rather than resolves this vulnerability (Modal Strength Inversion), and that the conditional structures employed in contemporary modal arguments function as semantic laundering devices that relocate rather than eliminate doubt. We further show that claims of necessary existence undermine the very modal space required to justify them, resulting in an instrument-level collapse of modal reasoning with respect to existence. Importantly, this critique does not reject the explanatory motivations behind classical theistic reasoning. On the contrary, we accept the structural constraints such arguments correctly identify non-contingency, simplicity, timelessness, and explanatory ultimacy. What fails is the inference from these structural constraints to agency. Once modal derivations and existential import are set aside, a third option becomes visible: constitutive causal structure, which satisfies all grounding constraints without invoking personhood. The paper’s conclusion is jurisdictional rather than metaphysical. It does not deny the existence of a personal ultimate ground. It shows only that modal logic cannot serve as the instrument for establishing it.
Carlos van Hamme (Sat,) studied this question.