L
Love4All
Guest
Anyway, further on you argue,
“I can explain how an eternally existing univrese could be uncaused. The same way an allegedly eternal God could be uncaused.”
To formalize once again, you seem to be going for,
Moving on again. I see that you actually have advanced a number of arguments. I guess I didn’t notice how many before, because I was looking for good ones. Anyway, next we have,
“Under Thomism, God is immutable, so he cannot possibly ‘judge’ anything.”
So, to formalize,
A little further on, you attempt to throw away causality as unnecessary. I’m not going to analyze your arguments to that effect, you are free to present them again or claim you already did, which is more your normal M.O., or, just assume you are correct because you wanna be. But it is a little absurd to be discussing the Cosmological Argument at all, if you are willing to discard causality. Anyway. . .
You made a comment,
“The problem with a Thomistic universe is that it pops out of even less than potency.”
Wrong. The “Thomistic universe,” by which you can only mean The universe, doesn’t “pop out of” anything. It was created, in its whole substance, out of nothing, by God. To say that God is “even less than potency” is to assume your favorite cherished belief, but you don’t get to assume that here. God is Infinite Being, substantially greater than anything that can even be imagined. And nothing, is just nothing. God creates the universe out of nothing, it doesn’t “pop out of even less than potency.”
Ah! NOW, I think I’ve located the original post where you first stated your argument. This must be the prize you sent me off in search of. Well, as a good hunter prepares his meal and then rejoices in his kill, I shall be happy to expose your fallacy. I hope it is worth it to you.
“I can explain how an eternally existing univrese could be uncaused. The same way an allegedly eternal God could be uncaused.”
To formalize once again, you seem to be going for,
- God is Uncaused.
- God and the Universe are fundamentally similar.
- Therefore, the Universe might be Uncaused.
Moving on again. I see that you actually have advanced a number of arguments. I guess I didn’t notice how many before, because I was looking for good ones. Anyway, next we have,
“Under Thomism, God is immutable, so he cannot possibly ‘judge’ anything.”
So, to formalize,
- God is immutable.
- That which is immutable cannot judge anything.
- Therefore God cannot judge anything.
- Judging is mutating.
- Therefore that which is immutable cannot judge anything.
A little further on, you attempt to throw away causality as unnecessary. I’m not going to analyze your arguments to that effect, you are free to present them again or claim you already did, which is more your normal M.O., or, just assume you are correct because you wanna be. But it is a little absurd to be discussing the Cosmological Argument at all, if you are willing to discard causality. Anyway. . .
You made a comment,
“The problem with a Thomistic universe is that it pops out of even less than potency.”
Wrong. The “Thomistic universe,” by which you can only mean The universe, doesn’t “pop out of” anything. It was created, in its whole substance, out of nothing, by God. To say that God is “even less than potency” is to assume your favorite cherished belief, but you don’t get to assume that here. God is Infinite Being, substantially greater than anything that can even be imagined. And nothing, is just nothing. God creates the universe out of nothing, it doesn’t “pop out of even less than potency.”
Ah! NOW, I think I’ve located the original post where you first stated your argument. This must be the prize you sent me off in search of. Well, as a good hunter prepares his meal and then rejoices in his kill, I shall be happy to expose your fallacy. I hope it is worth it to you.