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“Man is a Religious Animal. He is the only Religious Animal. He is the only animal that has the True Religion–several of them. He is the only animal that loves his neighbor as himself and cuts his throat if his theology isn’t straight. He has made a graveyard of the globe in trying his honest best to smooth his brother’s path to happiness and heaven…The higher animals have no religion. And we are told that they are going to be left out in the Hereafter. I wonder why? It seems questionable taste.” - Mark TwainWe know more science and technology, but I am not sure that we know more philosophy and theology than St. Thomas. I am aware that there was more knowledge accumulated through the centuries, but unlike progress in science and technology, progress in philosophy and theology does not happen through an expansion of knowledge, but through a deepening insight. I’m afraid that’s where we are lacking.
You’ll need to prove that one.Yes the Prime Mover is also the God described in Genesis, but you missed it.
Let’s not play word games. The terms are technically defined in ye olde philosophy - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potentiality_and_actualityAnswer me this: don’t you think that you are actually a human being in this world? If you say yes, then you are accepting your actuality as a human being in the real world. If you say no, then what are you actually?
Try reading what I actually said, which wasn’t that the world is nonsensically static but that “Thomas, like most of us, thinks of the world as a set of objects which move around and have a beginning and an end.”So, how do you think the world really is, static and eternal? Science says that the world is not static but moving; and the Bible says that the world is not eternal but had a beginning and will also have an end. Therefore, if you think that the world is static and eternal, then your concept of the world is not only unscientific, but also unbiblical. But, of course, that is just how you think of the world, not how the world really is.
No. Are there any absolute things?St. Thomas does not know Einstein’s mathematical theory of relativity, but that does not mean that he does not know that some things can be relative to another. What he does not accept is the idea that everything is relative, and that nothing is absolute. Don’t you agree with St. Thomas on that?
It’s never been demonstrated that the world has a beginning either, so can we finally agree that Thomas’ “proof” is no such thing?Perhaps. But the “perhaps” can best be answered by “Perhaps not!” Over the years the eternity of the world has been assumed, hypothesized and postulated, but never demonstrated.
Then if the prime mover breaks the premise that “whatever is moved is moved by another”, and moves things when it can’t itself move, everything else can also break the premise.*That’s because the Prime Mover does not need to move to be a mover. All it needs is to be in “act.” For a mover moves, not because it iself is moved, but because it is “in act,” and therefore it can communicate the act to something in potency toward the same act. *
The criticism, and it’s one of the standard criticisms, is that Thomas changes the rules for the prime mover and so the argument fails.