S
semaphore
Guest
Hello, I don’t really believe in God, depending on how you define the word, but I’m reading Saint Thomas Aquinas’ Summa Theologica anyway, because I like rigorously thought out systems of ideas. I’ve only finished the arguments for God’s existence and made it to the questions regarding His nature so far, and I was wondering if there’s a standard Catholic answer to the problem of having more than one first cause.
I believe Aristotle thought there were dozens of them. Why does the initial state prior to the birth of the universe have to be such that there is only one entity? And if the answer is that it would be simpler for there to be one entity than many, then arguments like that can also be turned against the Trinity, right? Not just the Trinity, but pretty much anything you might say about God that makes Him more complex than He needs to be?
Are these questions answered later on, or in other books? Also, Aristotle thought there were four types of causes, so why does the same entity have to be responsible for all of them with respect to the origin of the universe? Can’t there be one first material cause, one first efficient cause, etc? Thanks!
I believe Aristotle thought there were dozens of them. Why does the initial state prior to the birth of the universe have to be such that there is only one entity? And if the answer is that it would be simpler for there to be one entity than many, then arguments like that can also be turned against the Trinity, right? Not just the Trinity, but pretty much anything you might say about God that makes Him more complex than He needs to be?
Are these questions answered later on, or in other books? Also, Aristotle thought there were four types of causes, so why does the same entity have to be responsible for all of them with respect to the origin of the universe? Can’t there be one first material cause, one first efficient cause, etc? Thanks!