Yes they should - it was implied in this thread that Wikipedia had it wrong.No you didn’t, you just said I was wrong. You didn’t provide the proof I requested for Aquinas’s statement that the Unmoved mover
must be God. Without that proof, Aquinas falls flat on his beak.Maybe I don’t understand Aquinas; as I said before, perhaps there’s some background reading that substantiates his claim that the unmoved mover is, without doubt, God. However, I have asked you to provide links to such reading and you have failed to do so. So I’m left with what I could find, which I have effectively refuted. Your dodge into, “You don’t understand metaphysics” is pure fluff - tell me - how does an understanding of metaphysics suddenly make a claim that “the unmoved mover is God” somehow valid? You’re just picking me up on something I admittedly don’t know much about, to deflect my perfectly reasonable statement about something else. It would be like you pressing the “T” key on your keyboard and seeing an “H” appear on the screen, then your tech support guy telling you it’s just because you don’t understand microelectronics.Your demand for brevity is rude, as I’ve pointed out before. You seem quite happy to criticise others’ etiquette, the irony is not lost. However (using Wikipedia as nobody has been able to provide me with a better source):
The argument of the Unmoved Mover:
- Some things are moved. (Agree with this)
- Everything that is moving is moved by a mover. (Happy with this also)
- An infinite regress of movers is impossible. (Not sure this is provable, but I’m happy to concede it - it’s logically correct and it feels right)
- Therefore, there is an unmoved mover from whom all motion proceeds. Again, I’m happy to concede this, it makes sense)
- This mover is what we call God. (Uh-oh!! An assertion that the thing that kicked everything off is a sentient being with omnimaxial attributes!!! Where’s the proof for this statement???)
Unless “God” in this context is just a name, for which we could equally substitute “Hgskj,” then this final statement is just plain wrong. The fact is, if there is an unmoved mover, nobody knows
what it was, therefore the final bullet is entirely spurious, and indeed wrong if included. Alternatively, I could equally claim that “This mover is what we call Santa Claus” and voila!! I’ve just proved that Santa exists.
Apart from the Teleological argument, all the others are variations on a theme and fall to the same simple logic.
The teleologic argument falls quite simply to the fact that no purpose (in the context of intelligent intent at a Universal level) has ever been shown to exist. So the whole argument is built on an unprovable premise.
I know you’re not going to agree with me, but I
am right. Unless you can provide me with a link to a convincing argument that shows me why I’m wrong. You simply asserting that I am, with all due respect, isn’t enough, no matter how much you try and flower it up with claims of ignorance.