M
Matthias123
Guest
Greetings ladies and gentlemen, it has been some time since I debated here last – I hope you all remember me. Today I will be defending the validity and soundness of the cosmological argument. I have chosen to go with Aquinas’s version instead of other manifestations because every cosmological argument usually rests on certain metaphysical foundations, and these are often peculiar to the author of the argument – since I am familiar with the ontology of Aquinas this would seem to be the best choice.
The following is my formulation.
We find in nature things that are possible to be and not to be, since they are found to be generated, and to corrupt, and consequently, they are possible to be and not to be thus contingent. Now at every time interval t=n the cosmos is an aggregate of contingent entities – that is to say, the cosmos contains nothing but entities that are possibly not. Since each entity is possibly not at the same time, it follows that there are possibly no entities in the cosmos. If there are possibly no entities in the cosmos then there is possibly no cosmos because without parts there is no whole. (“A whole has parts” is an analytical proposition and is tautological) Given an actually infinite number of past time intervals (eternal universe) there will be at least one time interval where the cosmos corrupts into non-existence. Now since everything that exists is caused by what is, there would be nothing in existence, which is absurd. Therefore we must postulate of some necessary entity that transcends the world, and exists by virtue of its own essence. This is what men call God.
I will take objections as they come – I know somebody will bring up the fallacy of composition – since we are talking about parts failing simultaneously, this argument does not suffer from the problem.
The following is my formulation.
We find in nature things that are possible to be and not to be, since they are found to be generated, and to corrupt, and consequently, they are possible to be and not to be thus contingent. Now at every time interval t=n the cosmos is an aggregate of contingent entities – that is to say, the cosmos contains nothing but entities that are possibly not. Since each entity is possibly not at the same time, it follows that there are possibly no entities in the cosmos. If there are possibly no entities in the cosmos then there is possibly no cosmos because without parts there is no whole. (“A whole has parts” is an analytical proposition and is tautological) Given an actually infinite number of past time intervals (eternal universe) there will be at least one time interval where the cosmos corrupts into non-existence. Now since everything that exists is caused by what is, there would be nothing in existence, which is absurd. Therefore we must postulate of some necessary entity that transcends the world, and exists by virtue of its own essence. This is what men call God.
I will take objections as they come – I know somebody will bring up the fallacy of composition – since we are talking about parts failing simultaneously, this argument does not suffer from the problem.