Before I give a full response, can you define what you mean by “secondary causation”.
God is the ‘primary cause’ of all things. However, he gives humans the ability to think, reason, and choose courses of action freely. Therefore, humans – on their own and through their own agency – can be the sources of causes of various effects. Aquinas talks about this. When I place a lit match up against a piece of cotton, I’m causing the cotton to catch fire. It’s
not the case that God, seeing that I expect cotton to be flammable, sees my action and personally causes the cotton to burst into flame (the Islamic philosopher al-Ghazali made the argument that it really
is just God doing all the acting, and I’m causing nothing.)
And also, can you provide evidence that the ancient Jews held this view.
Well, there are no ancient philosophy texts from pre-exilic days to which we can turn, so the ‘evidence’ is Scriptural. There
are contemporary philosophers who make the claim that the ancients kept the two notions in a sort of cognitive tension. From a simple review of the OT, though, it seems clear that there was the idea that God’s will was supreme. There are many instances in which the OT author claims that events happened because God willed them.
I’m skeptical that the Jews would’ve called “evil” occurrences as being God’s will.
“I form the light, and create the darkness, I make weal and create woe; I, the LORD, do all these things.” – Isaiah 45:7.
In the Latin, the phrase is “faciens pacem et creans malum” – that is, “maker of peace and creator of evil.”
I’m skeptical that the Jews knew nothing about biology given the fact that Abraham’s wife, attributed her lack of child bearing to “old age” as opposed to “God’s will”.
They knew what acts made a baby, so it’s not that they “knew nothing about biology”. It would be fair to say that they knew that childbirth following menopause wasn’t expected.
And, of course, there
are miracles in the Bible, and so, we would say, there are instances of God’s clear intervention. However, they would have believed in a more strong notion of God’s role in temporal events.
I’m also skeptical that the Jews would have not known how to differentiate between natural phenomena and God’s will/actions.
I think it’s reasonable to suggest that they’d associate natural phenomena with God’s will.
continued…