Causation, just like space, time, etc… can only be defined within the Universe.
This is an assumption.
It is just as incorrect to ask “what caused the Universe?” or “what happened before the Universe?” or “what exists outside the Universe?”
One can correctly speak of ontological necessities using analogies that are normally used in the context of time. To ontologically precede potentiality, is only to say that being is always the
foundation of potentiality/change. Ontologically speaking, to fully explain potentiality in a logically consistent manner, we must say that all potentiality/change has to be rooted in a reality that is not itself a potentiality and is thus not changing. We are correct in making this argument because it follows necessarily from the fact that out of nothing comes nothing and thus change cannot come out of nothing, regardless of any linguistic difficulties we encounter in explaining this fact. Words such as “before” and “precede” is not being applied here in a physical sense or context, and certainly cannot be (
which rules out a physical cause); but they can be applied in an ontological sense, such as for example “the table is the foundation which is holding up my computer”. This is a kind of cause without speaking about before or after. Before and after is irrelevant in this context, and is not rendered meaningless just because i use a word that is commonly used in a time dependent context.
What is relevant is that physical change/potentiality cannot explain itself, since out of nothing comes nothing. Thus there must be a transcendent reality that can cause things to be real with out reference to physical time limitations. Certain “attributes” must be applied to that being in-order to make its causality logically consistent even if it is not comprehensible by your imagination. The attributes that we are left with describes Gods nature. Thus the theist is rationally justified in saying that there is a God. Even if you don’t think so. That’s the beauty of rational objectivity.
as it is to ask “what exists to the north from the North Pole?”. (The direction of “north” is simply undefined at the North Pole.) These questions attempt to apply some something where it is not applicable. Usually this error is called the “fallacy of the stolen concept”.
The problem you describe here is irrelevant since you cannot prove that causality is only meaningful in a time dependent sense. You are committing the fallacy of composition. You saying that because you only ever experience causality in time that therefore there is no other kind of causality; you are saying that there cannot be a causality that is not dependent on time. I have shown on more than one occasion how there could be, and there must be, otherwise you are saying that something can come from nothing.
There are some things which are called “brute facts”. Theists call their brute fact God, atheists call their brute fact the Universe.
In the context of existence, a brute fact, if by that you mean something
existing with out some sort of an objective ontological reason as to
why it exists, is a hypocritical notion that not only goes against reason but also cannot be proven a-prior or a-posterior to exist. Brute facts have never be positively discovered by either science or philosophy; thus this is something you believe according to faith, the faith that there is only physical things thus there must be brute facts; which also indirectly nicely illustrates to us that you agree that physicality is insufficient in rationally explaining its own existence. If you are talking about epistemological brute facts, this only refers to a limitation in our ability to comprehend or know things. That’s not an ontological brute fact. If you are not speaking in the nature of any of these definitions, then i don’t see its relevance to this conversation
The Thomistic theist, on the other-hand, does not argue for the existence of a brute fact. The theist argues that
a things existence either has its explanation in something else or in its
own nature.
That is not the same as arguing for a brute fact; since it admits that all things can be rationally explained. But that doesn’t mean we can all understand or comprehend those explanations; thus the theist also admits that where a thing is not ontologically necessary (
required for the existence of something), we cannot truly know of its existence without science. Metaphysics allows us a knowledge that is greater than science and is certain because it makes arguments about general facts rather than particular things.
Also, there are no “consequences” of what you say. Your faceless, skeletal, deistic god - even if exists, would have no relevance to us. And there is no logical way that would lead from this deity to the Christian God.
How do you know? It seems that this is what you want to be true since you placing the cart before the horse. The idea that there can never be a proof, is something that you believe, it is not something that you have proven. Your attitude reveals your intentions. perhaps if you saw the proof you still wouldn’t know it, because you cannot comprehend simple things such as out of nothing comes nothing.