Looks like the posts on this thread have been raised and discussed before
- couple of examples follow and the link is at the end of this post.It is
provided because the posters on this thread may learn something.
Truth, Love and Peace.
OchsFam
http://forums.catholic-questions.org/member.php?u=136949
Junior Member
Join Date: March 17, 2009
Posts: 346
Religion: Catholic
Re: Thomas Aquinas, The Unmoved Mover…
The unmoved mover concept is a natural result that derives from Newton’s
laws of motion.
We know all objects in motion remain in motion and all objects at rest
remain at rest unless acted upon by an outside force. We also know that
energy is neither created nor destroyed. Because objects in motion were
either created in motion or put into motion by some outside force, you get
into a what moved what argument. Eventually the argument will boil down to
“what started that movement” or “what created that explosion.” If energy
is neither created nor destroyed, you are left with an unprovable
hypothesis that is “time can go back infinitely” which is not only
unprovable but in my opinion would be unlikely and force more ridiculous
hypotheses to support it.
So the answer Thomas Aquinas came to is that eventually, you have to get
to an initial mover that is not dependent on movement. The mover would
need to be infinite movement (which is a concept physics could use but I
still cannot wrap my head around) and he termed that mover “the unmoved
mover.” Physics points you in this direction as one of its hypotheses for
the creation of the universe. While close minded scientists will reject
this theory because they do not want to believe in God nor do they want to
even entertain anything that shows there may be an initial cause outside
of their own imaginations.
It is funny to me that it is easier for people to believe that time can go
back infinitely and that everything is cyclical with no beginning or end
than to believe that maybe some intelligence beyond our understanding
created everything we know. Both require faith, one is in men (which is
scary beyond all else) and one in the creator. Choose wisely, your eternal
life may depend on it.
Keep in mind, the unmoved mover concept is co-dependent on his other five
proofs which use physics to define certain properties of God. For example,
God being outside of time and space are necessities to the unmoved mover
theory. All of this is easily concluded using only physics and its
fundamental laws. Again though, this is just one hypothesis and it is
ultimately the only one which makes sense of everything.
God Bless.
“The riddles of God are more satisfying than the solutions of man.” - G.
K. Chesterton (Introduction to the Book of Job, 1907)
This is the infinite regress. More info can be found here:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infinite_regress
Quote:
Originally Posted by TheTrueCentrist
http://forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?p=7697691#post7697691
Why must there be an unmoved mover, i.e. why can’t time extend back
infinitely?
You are basically saying: there is no unmoved mover, therefore there must
be an unmoved mover.
Because there is no such thing as “time” there is only change. Change ends
with G-d because as the being whose substance is existence there is
nowhere beyond Him to go. “No-thing exists” is a logical contradiction and
therefore impossible. no-thing=some-thing, notA=A. Any being who is not
literally the act of existing would itself be contingent and therefore a
creation, not G-d.
@Ochsfam- Whats up JoCo? Whats you’re Parish?. I live in the Dotte, St.
Patricks
I have dealt with great things that I do not understand; things too
wonderful for me, which I cannot know. -Job 42:3
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=547757