I’m writing a paper for a philosophy class on Aquinas’ five ways. My professor believes that his arguments are no longer relevant considering 21st century technology and advances. She, along with others in my class, argue that there is no reason to believe that God is the first mover, starter of the sequence of events…etc. She believes that since Aquinas says there must be a beginning to everything, there must also be a beginning to God, etc.
If you are understanding your teacher correctly, then it is clear she doesn’t know anything about Aquinas. Aquinas teaches much about the difference between contingent or non-necessary being and necessary being, God. Only contingent being has a beginning. Contingent beings, that is, all things in nature, have not within them the reason for their existence. Their existence is dependent on prior causes. Ultimately, we must reach an un-caused Cause which accounts for the existence of contingent beings. And this is God.
It also sounds like your teacher and class are stuck in a typical, crass misunderstanding of the five ways. Oftentimes, philosophy professor misrepresent Aquinas as saying that God stands at the beginning of a series of causes that stretches back in time. This is NOT Aquinas’s argument.
To the contrary, Aquinas assumes for his argument, following Aristotle, that the universe is eternal; that it has always existed. The argument does not involve a series of events going back in time to an Unmoved Mover. Let us call that view the “horizontal” view of causality. Aquinas’s argument must be understood, rather, as a “vertical” series of causes at any and every point in time.
For example, at any moment in time a tree depends on the Earth for its existence. The conditions on Earth the support the tree are dependent on the Sun, and so on. Likewise, we move vertically in this series of dependent causes, which cannot proceed to infinity, otherwise there is nothing, so to speak, on which to hang this entire series of causes. Ultimately, we must reach a cause which is un-caused and has within its being the reason for its own existence. This being we call God.
Aquinas demonstrations for the existence of God are just as valid today. He used the science of the day to illustrate his philosophical points. Yet his philosophical analysis is independent of the particular state of scientific knowledge. Today we use modern scientific understanding to illustrate the arguments. Two hundred years from now, Catholics will use the current state of scientific knowledge. The philosophical truths Aquinas expounds, if they were true in his time, they will be always be true.
In addition, Aquinas taught that the only way we know that the universe had a beginning in time is through Revelation. He thought that without Revelation it was reasonable to assume the universe always existed. In this conception of the universe as always having existed,
it would still be created and dependent on God for its existence. This idea involves a kind of “eternal creation” of the universe as opposed to a beginning of the universe by a creation in time. But that is a difficult concept to explain here. I just brought this up to further illustrate just how far off-base your teacher seems to be about the Five Ways.
This is my first philosophy class, so I’m still new to all of these ideas and concepts. Can anyone give me some insight into why (or why not) Aquinas’ ways are relevant or how to defend against her arguments?
Here are some resources for further study on Aquinas:
Peter Kreeft
A Companion to the Summa by Walter Farrell O.P., S.T.D., S.T.M.
Scroll down the page for Farrell’s commentary.
Aquinas: An Introduction to the Life and Work of the Great Medieval Thinker, by Frederick C. Copleston, SJ
Copleston’s book has an excellent explanation of the proofs for God’s existence for beginners and scholars. If you had this book you would have it made.
A History of Philosophy, Vol. 2: Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy From Augustine to Duns Scotus, by F.C. Copleston.
Volume 2 in Copleston’s History of Philosophy series has an excellent section on Aquinas. Oftentimes this series can be found in libraries and local book stores.