“The ultimate truth is that there is no Ultimate Truth.” And is this not, too, an ultimate truth? There is no doing without dogmas, such as this, because at that point, reason turns in on itself, as in, negatively, “I’m a liar, and this, too, is a lie,” etc. A truth, as the adequation of the mind to reality, is a statement that is “truly” a statement, but whether it predicates reality in any sense hinges on the purpose of its immediate use.
In all these premises and the comments about them that follow in this thread, the assumption is that causality is trans-universal, that is, transcendent. However, the word “universal” is used here equivocally as both imminent and transcendent. Since causality is characteristic of the imminent, their assumption throughout is that causality is also transcendent.
However, “uni-verse” is an Anglicization of the Latin for “the one in the many,” which refers, not to either the imminent or the transcendent but to the way mental causality differs from extra-mental causality, namely in the number of aspects, the “one” being the “universal” (in Scholastic terms) and the “many” being the “res,” or objective, objects of abstraction.
Mental causality is a linear series of syllogisms, albeit mostly subconscious, whereas extra-mental causality is multi-dimensional. Each being, distinguished from the unbroken and unbreakable continuum of being, contains an infinite number of aspects and exists apart from any presence in the human mind, including imminent and transcendent reality.
David Hume had a hard time with causality because he could not find a substance for it, but he misunderstand Aristotle’s use of “substance,” as does Kant (perhaps purposely for both) as the set of accidents in any objective reality, i.e. the aspects selected by the immediate purpose for observation. In short, if causality is universal (imminent), it may not be trans-universal, (transcendent). In fact, we predicate as much when we talk about “An Un-caused Cause,” i.e. Deity. That is, “un-caused cause” is a “non-cause,” just as Stephen Hawking declares, “Before the Big Bang, there was nothing,” i.e. no causality.
Thus, all arguments for or against the being of God hinge on the relation of mentality (mind-dependent data) to reality (mind-independent data). Until we take this difference in our axiom of thought into account, we fail to be internally consistent, which is, of course, the goal of all reasoning. Aquinas merely assumed this with his “five proofs,” of which causality is only one and that Anselm and Descartes (Cogito, ergo sum) ignored in their “psychological” proof and disproof respectively.
In short, at the root of this apparent disparity is a neglect of the difference between mental and extra-mental causality.