P
polytropos
Guest
As I said, I apologize if I was wrong.Your assumption is wrong. To me (and I think you) real philosophy is about keeping an open mind and not settling for easy answers. But on the internet what many call philosophy is talking up their favorite boy bands and conforming to tribal stereotypes. Anyone with a different take has to put up with their constant lynching parties.
As far as philosophy goes, I wouldn’t say, “real philosophy is about keeping an open mind and not settling for easy answers.” That very well might be necessary to find the truth, but say we were to find the truth easily. Then we would certainly be doing bad, unreal philosophy if we were to reject the truth for open-mindedness and tough answers. But that isn’t really important here.
Well, as I’ve intimated before, “principles” don’t have any causal efficacy. So you might say, “It is a principle that there is a purely actual Unmoved Mover.” But you couldn’t say, “The Unmoved Mover is a principle,” since that wouldn’t make sense, since the argument shows that the Unmoved Mover has causal efficacy by necessity.By the argument alone I think the unmoved mover is closer to a principle than a deity.
Linux is correct. On the contrary, it does follow that the Unmoved Mover is not a deistic god. The argument begins from any instance of change, including anything happening right now (like, say, you blinking your eyes as you read this post). As you’ll recall, it makes reference of per se causal series, which are simultaneous, so the argument shows that any change right now requires the existence of an Unmoved Mover (and because there could be no distinction between “two” things which are Pure Act, every change is in fact caused by the same Unmoved Mover).Even if we assume the argument is correct, it doesn’t follow that the unmoved mover didn’t put the universe in motion and then leave it on autopilot. Although admittedly that’s how some see God, constantly looking for signs.
The argument says nothing about the creation of the universe. As has been discussed at length in this topic, Aquinas did not believe that it was philosophically demonstrable that God created the universe (or that the universe had a finite past).
What do you mean by “an underlying assumption in the argument that material bodies are more than just math”? Are you math?Though many would say the number 1 is real, and unlike physicalists, idealists would say fundamentally reality is ideas. Even some physicalists say that since math underlies all physical law, perhaps math is all there is. For example, string theory tries to explain everything in terms of different geometrical arrangements, where cause and effect and all else also comes down to geometry. Which may well be wrong but points to an underlying assumption in the argument that material bodies are more than just math. Our common sense can fool us.
You seem to allow that this might be wrong, but if you want to use it as an objection you’d have to argue for it positively. To me this seems like a bad example of modern eliminativism. Physical laws are mathematical abstractions about relationships between matter and energy. So are you suggesting that we reify the abstractions and deny the existence of matter and energy? Or what? (Please correct me if I am misrepresenting what you are proposing.)
As for the number 1, the argument goes forward whether it exists ontologically as some sort of immaterial object or is just an abstraction.
Is everything made of particles… or is everything made of math? Which is it going to be? (Just kidding, ignore this.)The issue though, is with statements in the argument such as “whatever is in motion must be put in motion by another”, since we now know that everything is made of particles and all particles must be in constant motion. Which raises questions such as whether a state of lack-of-motion is even possible, and from there, whether our common sense cause-and-effect view is naive.
In any case, in the statement “whatever is in motion must be put in motion by another,” motion means change, which means “a reduction from potency to act by something else in act.” So that can’t be conflated with the Newtonian understanding of particles in constant motion, because the two notions are just referring to different things.
Not to mention, in the Newtonian conception, motion is a state, whereas in the Aristotelian conception, motion is change. So the principles at face value agree: a particle stays in motion (Newtonian) unless acted upon by some force. It only changes from its state when it is acted upon. In Aristotelian terms, it has a state (act) but could be in another state (potentiality) only if it is acted upon by something else in act.
A discussion of the compatibilities of Newtonian and Aristotelian motion can be found faculty.fordham.edu/klima/SMLM/PSMLM10/PSMLM10.pdf. (I hope you don’t interpret this as didactic or condescending. It just covers the topic in more depth than we can go into here; ignore it if you’d like.)
It should be obvious while this won’t do. You said there were “many” alternatives. I said, fine, at least show me “a few.” And now you say, “Too many to mention.”Too many to mention. Take our relationship with God, take the problem of evil, take all the differing answers.
I don’t know what “our relationship with God” or “the problem of evil” has to do with it. Could you clarify?