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NowAgnostic
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Two questions on Aquinas’ First Way (argument from motion), spinning off from the PSR thread.
I accept the definition of motion as reduction of potentiality to act, and that nothing can move itself. I’ll tentatively accept that there cannot be an infinite regression in an essentially subordinated series of causes (I have not seen a logical proof of this though, if someone would like to furnish one please go ahead).
Let’s say B moves A from potency to act in some respect in which B is already in act. The argument (in the case of an essentially ordered series) is that B must be caused to move A by some other agent C. Then, C must be caused to move B to move A by agent D, and so on. This is to be distinguished from asking how B got into act in the relevant respect in the first place, saying it must have been brought there by C at some point in the past, C must have been brought there by D further in the past, and so on. This would only be an accidentally subordinated series (C’s action only causes B’s coming into act, but not A’s). This is not Aquinas’ argument for his is based upon an essentially ordered series (other versions of the Cosmological Argument argue against the possibility of an accidentally ordered infinite regress but this is not relevant here).
First question: doesn’t the argument use the Principle of Sufficient Reason, even if it isn’t stated explicitly as such? B moving A cannot be just a brute fact without explanation otherwise the argument never gets off the ground. Now perhaps it can be clarified that before B moves A, B is only potentially a mover of A, and after C’s action the potentiality is actualized, making B an actual mover of A. At least you need a form of the PSR which states that potentialities don’t actualize without explanation, and to me that IS the PSR (explaining why this potentiality rather than that is actualized is the same is explaining why this contingent fact rather than that is true). As will be seen, the PSR principle that “nothing exists without an explanation” is necessary as well.
Second question: How can it be concluded that the first mover in such a series is a purely actual being (God) acting contingently without special pleading or equivocation on the meaning of “act”? I’ll pose the second part of the question first. Now by definition if there must always be an external cause for one being moving another the series must go on to infinity. But the PSR does not demand a cause, only an explanation, and an epistemically possible explanation is that at the end of the chain Z is moving Y not because Z was moved by something else, but because it is logically necessary that Z move Y because of Z’s own nature, itself also logically necessary. And, obviously, what is logically necessary cannot change, so Z’s will to move Y is fixed in eternity. But this would make all motion logically necessary, a conclusion which proponents of the First Way won’t accept. However if the implicit premise “nothing moves another without a sufficient explanation” is abandoned only when an unpalatable conclusion is reached, that’s special pleading.
Now, it will be urged that the premise “nothing moves another without a sufficient explanation” only applies to those movers changed from potentially moving another to actually moving another, but in the case of God, He is pure act, from eternity, there never “was” any potentiality in Him. But then why does the first mover have to be purely actual, not just actual in the respect of what is being reduced from potentiality to act? I can postulate an eternally existent entity (or group of them for that matter), not purely actual in every respect, but actual in the necessary respect to produce the observed motion. Note that they were always in act in the necessary respect from eternity, there never “was” any potentiality in the relevant respect in them either. These are not logically impossible entities in this framework (Aquinas himself thought an eternal universe was possible). It will be asked what explanation can be given for their existence, though. And I will respond by asking what explanation can be given for God’s existence. If it is argued that He is logically necessary as “pure act” then that “act” is also being in act in the sense of being a mover, as argued above to avoid demanding an explanation for His being mover, and that this makes being a mover also logically necessary. There is an equivocation on “act” - “act” as being, or “act” as mover.
I accept the definition of motion as reduction of potentiality to act, and that nothing can move itself. I’ll tentatively accept that there cannot be an infinite regression in an essentially subordinated series of causes (I have not seen a logical proof of this though, if someone would like to furnish one please go ahead).
Let’s say B moves A from potency to act in some respect in which B is already in act. The argument (in the case of an essentially ordered series) is that B must be caused to move A by some other agent C. Then, C must be caused to move B to move A by agent D, and so on. This is to be distinguished from asking how B got into act in the relevant respect in the first place, saying it must have been brought there by C at some point in the past, C must have been brought there by D further in the past, and so on. This would only be an accidentally subordinated series (C’s action only causes B’s coming into act, but not A’s). This is not Aquinas’ argument for his is based upon an essentially ordered series (other versions of the Cosmological Argument argue against the possibility of an accidentally ordered infinite regress but this is not relevant here).
First question: doesn’t the argument use the Principle of Sufficient Reason, even if it isn’t stated explicitly as such? B moving A cannot be just a brute fact without explanation otherwise the argument never gets off the ground. Now perhaps it can be clarified that before B moves A, B is only potentially a mover of A, and after C’s action the potentiality is actualized, making B an actual mover of A. At least you need a form of the PSR which states that potentialities don’t actualize without explanation, and to me that IS the PSR (explaining why this potentiality rather than that is actualized is the same is explaining why this contingent fact rather than that is true). As will be seen, the PSR principle that “nothing exists without an explanation” is necessary as well.
Second question: How can it be concluded that the first mover in such a series is a purely actual being (God) acting contingently without special pleading or equivocation on the meaning of “act”? I’ll pose the second part of the question first. Now by definition if there must always be an external cause for one being moving another the series must go on to infinity. But the PSR does not demand a cause, only an explanation, and an epistemically possible explanation is that at the end of the chain Z is moving Y not because Z was moved by something else, but because it is logically necessary that Z move Y because of Z’s own nature, itself also logically necessary. And, obviously, what is logically necessary cannot change, so Z’s will to move Y is fixed in eternity. But this would make all motion logically necessary, a conclusion which proponents of the First Way won’t accept. However if the implicit premise “nothing moves another without a sufficient explanation” is abandoned only when an unpalatable conclusion is reached, that’s special pleading.
Now, it will be urged that the premise “nothing moves another without a sufficient explanation” only applies to those movers changed from potentially moving another to actually moving another, but in the case of God, He is pure act, from eternity, there never “was” any potentiality in Him. But then why does the first mover have to be purely actual, not just actual in the respect of what is being reduced from potentiality to act? I can postulate an eternally existent entity (or group of them for that matter), not purely actual in every respect, but actual in the necessary respect to produce the observed motion. Note that they were always in act in the necessary respect from eternity, there never “was” any potentiality in the relevant respect in them either. These are not logically impossible entities in this framework (Aquinas himself thought an eternal universe was possible). It will be asked what explanation can be given for their existence, though. And I will respond by asking what explanation can be given for God’s existence. If it is argued that He is logically necessary as “pure act” then that “act” is also being in act in the sense of being a mover, as argued above to avoid demanding an explanation for His being mover, and that this makes being a mover also logically necessary. There is an equivocation on “act” - “act” as being, or “act” as mover.