St. Thomas' Motion Argument and Modern Physics

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Yes, I think that is about it. Linus2nd
Whatever else Genesis says or implies, it is fairly clear that God is not in a constant frenzy of creating. Why else would Genesis say He rested? Is there some metaphorical meaning of “rest” that you guys are privy to that I am not?
 
“All moral truth” == Love. There is no Truth beyond Love.

Matthew 22:34 When the Pharisees heard that he had silenced the Sadducees, they gathered together, 35 and one of them [a scholar of the law] tested him by asking, 36 “Teacher, which commandment in the law is the greatest?” 37 He said to him, “You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind. 38 This is the greatest and the first commandment. 39 The second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. 40 The whole law and the prophets depend on these two commandments.”
They have to knowingly reject all moral truth with finality. God does not judge what we don’t know.
 
Will you stop preaching.
When it’s done, if that day ever comes.
We are ( at least we were) trying to have an open philosophical discussion, so throwing in theological assertions and treats is way out of line.
It seemed to me rather that you were being very touchy and defensive, as if you had an agenda to guard. I could be wrong, but, it did not seem to me our discussion was very open. I’d love to have an actually open discussion, but our history contains interchanges like this one:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Love4All
The simplest way to represent world A containing b, c, and d, is as follows:

A = {b, c, d}.

belorg:
And if there is nothing else in this world besides b,c and d, then writing this as a set allow to perform calculations, but does not change a reality containing b,c and d into a rality containing some magical entity. You keep confusing a mathematical construction with reality.

And I am not going to waste anymore time on this.

(end quote)

If that is your idea of open philosophical discourse, then it seems we have different ideas about what that might be.
I could say the exact same things about you, just changing a few words and names and the above is about you.
But I won’t do that, because that is not the way I want to discuss things. I love the truth, even if it turns out the truth is not as pleasant as I would like it to be and I will change my mind as sson as a convincing argument against my position is presented. But so far, theer have ben pages and pages of futile attemps at redefining just about every concept in order for it to fit you preferred ‘truth’. And after all these pages, my argument is still left untouched.
Several times, you have been asked to state your argument formally. If I haven’t yet asked you to do so also, I am asking you now. Your one-liners don’t cut it.
 
Just one sentence will suffice. An immutable being can only have one possible state.
A Simple Being cannot have several states. A Purely Actual Being is always purely actual. A Purely Actual Creator creates from His state of Pure Actuality. There is no change in Pure Act, since all change is from potentiality to actuality.

The instant before God creates, He is Pure Act. In the act of creating, He is Pure Act. After He has finished creating, He is Pure Act. What has changed about God?
 
They have to knowingly reject all moral truth with finality. God does not judge what we don’t know.
Another flaw in your logic here is that it is impossible for any finite creature to know “all” of any kind of truth. So it is impossible for any finite creature to know all moral truth, and thus impossible for any finite creature to knowingly reject all moral truth.

God is Love, and His Judgment is a Judgment of Love, and the Judgment is whether or not the soul being judged loves. There is nothing more to it than that. If God is Simple, and God is Love, then Love is Simple. Then the Judgment also is Simple: whosoever loves, the same is born of God. Who does not love, has never known Him.
 
A Simple Being cannot have several states. A Purely Actual Being is always purely actual. A Purely Actual Creator creates from His state of Pure Actuality. There is no change in Pure Act, since all change is from potentiality to actuality.

The instant before God creates, He is Pure Act. In the act of creating, He is Pure Act. After He has finished creating, He is Pure Act. What has changed about God?
Again, this begs the question. I have explained to Eleve that, if God decides not to create, he does not apply his creative force (whatever that may be), and when he decides to create he does apply it. A state in which this force is applied (or being applied) is different from a state inw which this force is not being applied. That means that God has two different states. Now Eleve thinks that God being eternal and timeless avoids this problem because in that case there is ot a state of not applying F (creative force) followed by a state in which F is applied.
And that’s why I use possible world semantics and say that an immutablebeing can only have one possible state, and you seem to agree with that.
However, youi claim that, since God is said to be Pure Act,althouigh having having different possible states clearly entails mutability, God is Pure Act and cannot change.
What you are saying is

God is Pure Act
There are good arguments that show that God is mutable
But God cannot be mutable because he is Pure Act.

While I say

God is claimed to be Pure Act
There are good arguments that show that God is mutable
Therefore God cannot be Pure Act.

My argument is valid and its soundness depends on whether the second premise is true. Your argument begs the question.
 
Then how, precisely, are you arguing that creation is contrary to immutability? Seems to me the only way to do that is to argue that creation entails that God be in one way at one time and in another way at another time, which is impossible to do without speaking of a temporal ordering.

Again, if you would care to spell out your argument yourself, in a paragraph or so, instead of by one-line responses to other attempts to tease it out, it would be very helpful.
If you understand the implications of Thomism, you should know that, regradsless of time, the immutability of God, together with His essential simplicity, entails that God cannot have two possible states. It is impossible under Thomism (and Thomiist can correct me if I am wrong) for God to have property X in one possible world and property Y in another possible world.
 
Again, this begs the question. I have explained to Eleve that, if God decides not to create, he does not apply his creative force (whatever that may be), and when he decides to create he does apply it. A state in which this force is applied (or being applied) is different from a state inw which this force is not being applied. That means that God has two different states. Now Eleve thinks that God being eternal and timeless avoids this problem because in that case there is ot a state of not applying F (creative force) followed by a state in which F is applied.
No, that’s not what I think; I would be rather silly to think that, since one state could never follow another for a timeless being.

Instead, I think that God timelessly causes various events which have a temporal ordering in the world. So using the brackets to avoid ambiguity, it would be “God causes that ,” not “God, at different times, causes that .” It’s a bit like if I set two alarm clocks. I could be causing one to go off tomorrow and one to go off a year from now. But I’m not acting a year and a day apart. I’m acting at once in order to bring about events separated by a year.
If you understand the implications of Thomism, you should know that, regradsless of time, the immutability of God, together with His essential simplicity, entails that God cannot have two possible states. It is impossible under Thomism (and Thomiist can correct me if I am wrong) for God to have property X in one possible world and property Y in another possible world.
Thomas is explicit that “God can do what he does not.”
 
If you understand the implications of Thomism, you should know that, regradsless of time, the immutability of God, together with His essential simplicity, entails that God cannot have two possible states. It is impossible under Thomism (and Thomiist can correct me if I am wrong) for God to have property X in one possible world and property Y in another possible world.
Because God is infinite, all possibilities exist in God; God is pure spirit (non-material).

Everything that exists external to God began as a possibility in God.

All “concepts” of all possible worlds exist in God eternally as pure spirit.

The act of creation merely is an actualization of a specific concept.

A concept does not change within God; an actualized concept remains a possibility forever whether or not it is actualize in an act of creation.

Therefore God is the same God with the same infinitude of possibilities before, during, or after an act of creation.

That which is created is separated from God while still being “a part” of God" in the same way that we can separate (distinquish) the infinitude of rational numbers (aleph-null) from the infinitude of real numbers (aleph-1).

Remember belorg a chicken retains the possibility of creating an egg whether or not an egg is created. The chicken is the same chicken before and after it actualizes an egg. It remains unchanged since it retains the possibility of creating an egg as long as it’s a chicken.

Because God is infinite, God does not change; God is immutable.

Yppop
 
Again, this begs the question. I have explained to Eleve that, if God decides not to create, he does not apply his creative force (whatever that may be), and when he decides to create he does apply it. A state in which this force is applied (or being applied) is different from a state inw which this force is not being applied. That means that God has two different states. Now Eleve thinks that God being eternal and timeless avoids this problem because in that case there is ot a state of not applying F (creative force) followed by a state in which F is applied.
And that’s why I use possible world semantics and say that an immutablebeing can only have one possible state, and you seem to agree with that.
However, youi claim that, since God is said to be Pure Act,althouigh having having different possible states clearly entails mutability, God is Pure Act and cannot change.
What you are saying is

God is Pure Act
There are good arguments that show that God is mutable
But God cannot be mutable because he is Pure Act.

While I say

God is claimed to be Pure Act
There are good arguments that show that God is mutable
Therefore God cannot be Pure Act.

My argument is valid and its soundness depends on whether the second premise is true. Your argument begs the question.
There are no good arguments to show that God is mutable. If you think there are, produce one.
 
No, that’s not what I think; I would be rather silly to think that, since one state could never follow another for a timeless being.
I think my spelling mistake lead to this confusion.
“Now Eleve thinks that God being eternal and timeless avoids this problem because in that case there is not a state of not applying F (creative force) followed by a state in which F is applied.”
That’s what should have been there, which is actually the same as what you wrote above.
Instead, I think that God timelessly causes various events which have a temporal ordering in the world. So using the brackets to avoid ambiguity, it would be “God causes that ,” not “God, at different times, causes that .” It’s a bit like if I set two alarm clocks. I could be causing one to go off tomorrow and one to go off a year from now. But I’m not acting a year and a day apart. I’m acting at once in order to bring about events separated by a year.
I fail to se how that’s related to my argument.
Thomas is explicit that “God can do what he does not.”
This Thomas quote does not address my argument.
 
There is No Truth beyond Love.
Nobody has denied that. My statement remains irrefutable and reasonable.

They have to knowingly reject all moral truth with finality. God does not judge what we don’t know.
 
There are no good arguments to show that God is mutable. If you think there are, produce one.
I have been doing that for several pages . But regardless whether there are good arguments or not, your reply is question-begging.

I’ll show you by using an aanlogy

Say X is a blue entity that cannot change colour.

Then your argument comes down to

1 X’s colour can’t change
2. When X becomes mad, he turns red.
3 Turning red cannot be a chnage in colour because X can’t change colour.

So, it’s not enough to assert that a diffrence between two possible states cannot be a chnage because God cannot chnagen because the last part is what needs to argued for.
So, it is question-begging.

Now, do you have a real reply to my arguments?
 
This Thomas quote does not address my argument.
It addresses your claim that God only has one possible state. If God possibly does differently than what he actually does, that means he can possibly be in the state of doing X while actually be in the state of doing Y. So it is no part of Thomism that God only has one possible state, or that God has precisely the same properties in all possible worlds. Perhaps there is a possible world where God caused the Eiffel Tower to turn red in January 2003. Thomism does not rule this out.

Of course, it is hard to say how this addresses your argument, because you have yet to give any extensive exposition of your argument.
 
Yes, you asserted that God, who is immutable, has some sort of creative power that can be applied or not applied, but this does not make any difference. I know that you believe this, but you cannot back it up with logic.
The problem is that you restrict logic to the strictures of materialism or naturalism. So any logic outside this artificially errected barrier is false. People put blinders on horses so they won’t be freigntened. This is what you have done to yourself. Linus2nd
 
It addresses your claim that God only has one possible state. If God possibly does differently than what he actually does, that means he can possibly be in the state of doing X while actually be in the state of doing Y. So it is no part of Thomism that God only has one possible state, or that God has precisely the same properties in all possible worlds. Perhaps there is a possible world where God caused the Eiffel Tower to turn red in January 2003. Thomism does not rule this out.
Firstly, I can understand how someone can claim that God can do diiferent things in diffrent worlds. There may be some weird magical property of God’s creative force that allows it to have different results indiffrent worlds. To be honest, I think that is a crazy idea, but I am willing to say for the sake of the argument that this is not really a different or a changing property of God. IOW, I am willing to grant that God’s creative force could create a rabbit in one world and a dove in another, all be remaininf exactly the same.
What I am not willing to grant is that God, whose essence is his existence and who is ultimately simple and uncomposed, can in one world be applying a force (which , under Thomism is just God Himself, not a part of God) and in the other world do absolutely nothing with that same force. that is, now matter how you look at it, an essential diffrence between the God in w1 and the God in w2.
Of course, it is hard to say how this addresses your argument, because you have yet to give any extensive exposition of your argument.
Well, I really don’t understand why you keep replying to something you do not understand.
 
The problem is that you restrict logic to the strictures of materialism or naturalism. So any logic outside this artificially errected barrier is false. People put blinders on horses so they won’t be freigntened. This is what you have done to yourself. Linus2nd
If there are two sort of logic, there is no way to discuss this. Because, who knows, that beyond the strictures of materialism or naturalism, things may just pop into existendce completely uncaused?
 
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