E
Eleve
Guest
Then it sounds like the issue you take here is not that you think this isn’t “causation in any sort of meaningful way,” but just that you think it’s in fact impossible.Don’t try to move the goalposts, Eleve. If you think this can be called causation in any sort of meaningful way, then you argue for it. Of course if God created the universe this would be causation
Care to explain what exactly you mean by “Ex nihilo nihil fit”? And exactly why it prohibits the creation of the Universe by God?But the Thomist God cannot create the universe as that would be a violation of ex nihilo nihil fit.
And care to show where in Thomas or anywhere else in classical theism you find your interpretation of Ex nihilo nihil fit?
Please, write it up as a syllogism. I want to see exactly what your premises are and how they get to your conclusion. Instead of this eternally idiotic cat-and-mouse game where I press you and press you and then you say “Oh look over there, causation is meaningless (but only when you say it), oh, where were we, anyway Ex nihilo nihil fit means God can’t make the universe.”
Please. All I want is for you to act like a philosopher, tell me what your premises are, and make it clear how they get you to your conclusion. Modus ponens will suffice. Can you do that?