Yet Aquinas uses rules within our universe to arrive at the conclusion of that which exists outside our universe.
No. Aquinas takes logical properties of portions of our universe to extrapolate properties of the universe as a whole (which, I might point out, is a logical fallacy of composition). From that he contends that the
universe as a whole is a reaction (a la, if there are times in which each thing in the universe would not have existed, there is necessarily a time in which NO thing in the universe would have existed). So to Aquinas, the logic of the universe applied to the universe says that at one time the universe as a whole did not exist. It also states that the universe can’t have started itself because no item in the universe is self-creating.
From this position, he extrapolates that SOMETHING must have pre-existed the universe and does not follow the laws of the universe. That something is the first cause… a cause which he described as God.
But you’ll note: this proof makes no assertion about anything outside the universe, nor does it attempt to extrapolate anything about the nature of such a God.
I would further like to repeat that something which is self-consistent by definition requires no outside factors in its existence.
Is the idea: a number always equals itself such a definition? What about the idea of a square circle? Is that a logically contradictory definition?
Outside the universe, niether statement has any meaning that we can ascertain because dimensions (length, width, height) and units of measurement break down at the boundaries of the universe. IOW, outside the universe, we do not know that the concept of “square” or “circle” has any meaning… no known dimensions means no rational concept of shape.
My whole point is that logic is not dependent on the Creator just as the Creator is not dependent on Himself. I am saying logic is a property of God, not something created by God.
You’re taking a hellenistic view of logic… one which is radically condemned by the church. Read the article you linked to and you’ll see that hellenistic views of Logos are the basis of the Arian heresy and are condemned.
You will need to cite a reference for this.
Dr Stephen Hawking (emphasis mine): "At this time, the Big Bang, all the matter in the universe, would have been on top of itself. The density would have been infinite. It would have been what is called, a singularity.
At a singularity, all the laws of physics would have broken down. This means that the state of the universe, after the Big Bang, will not depend on anything that may have happened before, because** the deterministic laws that govern the universe will break down in the Big Bang.** The universe will evolve from the Big Bang, completely independently of what it was like before. Even the amount of matter in the universe, can be different to what it was before the Big Bang, as the Law of Conservation of Matter, will break down at the Big Bang. "
You can read more about this here:
hawking.org.uk/index.php/lectures/publiclectures/62
In fact, Dr. Hawking desperately seeks an explanation for how the universe’s laws do NOT break down outside the universe, because if they do entirely then we
must posit a “God”…
But God IS bound by logical constraints.
noooooooo… God’s actions in THIS universe are bound by logical constraints insofar as the universe and logic is a result of God’s rationality. Human definitions of words, likewise, do not bind God. We define a square as a shape with four equalateral sides at right angles to each other. Can God create a circular square? God can create whatever He wants, but
OUR observational data is how
we categorize God’s creation. Not the other way around.
Do you believe that God has the power to constrain His power and yet remain omnipotent?
This has always been a garbage line of thinking. I can go on a killing spree at any time. I don’t. I constrain myself. However, I
could still go on said killing spree. The ability to choose NOT to act is constraint, but it does not limit future action. (although, again, we run into the problem: outside the universe there is no time as we understand it, hence no future so to speak)
Since you are insistent on maintaining that logic is not a property of God, I will try this from yet another angle:
newadvent.org/cathen/09328a.htm
From your own source (which you should read before you post): “In the subsequent history of
Christian theology many conflicts would naturally arise between these rival concepts, and Hellenic speculations constitute a dangerous temptation for
Christian writers.”
John 1 - “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.”
The Word is translated here as Logos or Logic. Before we get into a semantics debate, reason, intellect and logic are synonyms.
Your etymology is incorrect. Logic comes from the Latin Logica, which came from the greek Logikos… meaning “of or pertaining to reason.” Logos, greek, means “reason, idea, word.”
So Logic pertains to reason. Or in other words Logic (Logikos) is a result and creation of the Reason (Logos) of God.
Aquinas extrapolates properties of God from what we observe from the universe.
Actually, every argument built by Aquinas is based on the idea of an entity outside the universe that DOES NOT FOLLOW THE LOGICAL RULES OF THIS UNIVERSE, and that this entity is responsible for initiation of the universe.
He calls this completely ambiguous entity “God.”