Can God be Proven?

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That fact that actual infinities don’t exist in reality obliterates your objection, even though your objection is completely irrelevant regarding Aquinas’ argument.
You have yet to provide any proof that they do not exist and since his proof depends on that thought, he is required to provide such proof, else he should have said, “IF an infinite chain of events cannot exist, then there must be a God.”
A causal chain, even an infinite one, does not require the passage of time. It does require a first cause.
Again, you merely make assertions with no logic provided. But I’m curious how you think a "casual chain of movers, one to another, as stated in his argument, requires no passage of time. Time IS change.

And again, you state the assertion, the assumption, the presumption, that an infinite chain requires a beginning when the very definition of an infinite chain (being boundless) says that it has no “bound”, no “end” and no “first”.

Many people have no trouble accepting that you can always add a number to the last so as to get another and continue forever. They have no trouble with forward time being infinite. But when it comes to the exact same logic being applied in reverse, they can’t accept it. You can always add another negative number and thus have more negative that you had before. You can always take away another second and go further back in time. It does not require that you have an actual functioning watch as materialism would suggest when it declares that time began 14 billions years ago. That is a very specifically secular, materialist, and atheist thought.

Show me the proof that an infinite time line requires a beginning OR be honest enough to admit that Aquinas didn’t prove that there must be a first mover as you cannot prove it either.
 
You have yet to provide any proof that they do not exist and since his proof depends on that thought, he is required to provide such proof, else he should have said, “IF an infinite chain of events cannot exist, then there must be a God.”

Again, you merely make assertions with no logic provided. But I’m curious how you think a "casual chain of movers, one to another, as stated in his argument, requires no passage of time. Time IS change.

And again, you state the assertion, the assumption, the presumption, that an infinite chain requires a beginning when the very definition of an infinite chain (being boundless) says that it has no “bound”, no “end” and no “first”.
Cause and effect can be concurrent. The passage of time is not required.

newadvent.org/summa/1002.htm#article3
The second way is from the nature of the efficient cause. In the world of sense we find there is an order of efficient causes. There is no case known (neither is it, indeed, possible) in which a thing is found to be the efficient cause of itself; for so it would be prior to itself, which is impossible. Now in efficient causes it is not possible to go on to infinity, because in all efficient causes following in order, the first is the cause of the intermediate cause, and the intermediate is the cause of the ultimate cause, whether the intermediate cause be several, or only one. Now to take away the cause is to take away the effect. Therefore, if there be no first cause among efficient causes, there will be no ultimate, nor any intermediate cause. But if in efficient causes it is possible to go on to infinity, there will be no first efficient cause, neither will there be an ultimate effect, nor any intermediate efficient causes; all of which is plainly false. Therefore it is necessary to admit a first efficient cause, to which everyone gives the name of God.
Instead of rewording Aquinas’ arguments to your liking accept them as they are. He says nothing about the passage of time. He says that even if it is possible to have an infinite causal chain there still must be a first cause.
Many people have no trouble accepting that you can always add a number to the last so as to get another and continue forever. They have no trouble with forward time being infinite. But when it comes to the exact same logic being applied in reverse, they can’t accept it. You can always add another negative number and thus have more negative that you had before. You can always take away another second and go further back in time. It does not require that you have an actual functioning watch as materialism would suggest when it declares that time began 14 billions years ago. That is a very specifically secular, materialist, and atheist thought.

Show me the proof that an infinite time line requires a beginning OR be honest enough to admit that Aquinas didn’t prove that there must be a first mover as you cannot prove it either.
That’s because future time is potential and past time is actual. Past time has already elapsed (been achieved), future time can potentially be achieved. You can’t count to infinity because by definition reaching infinity cannot be achieved as you can always add one more.

What you propose is that past (achieved) time is infinite (unachievable.) :whacky:

An achieved unachievable is a contradiction and cannot be.

You’re beating a dead horse.
 
Please note that in his first way, he is speaking specifically of “movement”. How is anything a movement if it does not involve change which is what time IS?

Again, you merely declare that something is “unachievable” and thus cannot actually exist. That is a flawed logic applied to a false assertion.

So I take it that you cannot prove that a “first mover” has to exist any more than Aquinas. But also are not honest enough to admit that you can’t.

Your faith in what others have said is not proof of anything. At one time EVERYONE thought the Earth was flat.

If you cannot provide a legitimate logical train of thought that leads to your chosen conclusion, then we have no more to say and I stand on the statement that **Aquinas did NOT prove a first mover. **
 
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