Originally Posted by inocente:
“If we could determine which is correct then philosophers could also have determined which is correct and there wouldn’t be different schools of philosophy in the first place.”
Originally Posted by Love4All:
“You are assuming they are all in good faith. I do not share that assumption.”
Originally Posted by inocente:
“I guess that dismissing those you don’t like by saying they’re not in good faith might be comforting, but isn’t exactly admissible as a rational argument.”
NOTE: This is a straw man, I never advanced any such argument.
Originally Posted by Love4All:
“I am having trouble connecting your criticism to any argument I’ve advanced.”
You apparently missed the tongue-in-cheek nature of my objection. I did not really mean that I had misplaced my argument, I meant that I never advanced any such thing. My statement, above, that you are falsely calling an argument, is this:
- You are assuming they are all in good faith.
- I do not share that assumption.
Kindly note that no conclusion can possibly be drawn from this. It is not a syllogism. It lacks a middle term.
Your original statement, rather than the arguments of philosophers, is what I was addressing.
“If we could determine which is correct then philosophers could also have determined which is correct and there wouldn’t be different schools of philosophy in the first place.”
This carries certain untenable assumptions. It is in fact a fallacy of argument from authority. You are essentially saying that, if we wish to determine which philosophies are correct, all our efforts will be futile, because the authorities have already examined them and been unable to make the determination. Your argument to this effect takes the following form:
- We can determine which philosophies are correct.
- If we can determine it, then philosophers can determine it.
- But philosophers have been unable to determine it.
- Therefore, we cannot determine it — 1 is incorrect.
Speaking only for myself, my astuteness in philosophy does not depend either on the astuteness nor on the honesty of anyone else. Your mileage may vary, I guess.
If you follow the posts back, you implied that only a stubborn horse would refuse to admit the wisdom of your position.
My philosophy is nowhere near as egocentric as your words imply.
You said that “Saint Thomas knew God a lot more deeply than you do. I concur”. The fallacy is that Thomas’ argument must therefore be correct.
More straw. I never asserted this, nor argued for it.
I will state unequivocally that you ought to be less dismissive and more respectful of Saint Thomas, because he is
Saint Thomas. The Church does not arbitrarily assign the title, “Saint.”
If you have a cogent argument to advance against something he wrote, you should advance a cogent argument. For example, for this thread, if you have some way of showing that modern physics removes the force of the First Way, go for it. That’s the point of this thread. If your only beef is that we should not argue for the existence of God, and philosophy is useless, then I submit, once again, that Saint Thomas’s work is far from valueless, it is in fact of very great value. It is work that will survive the fire to come, and not be burned up, because it is built on the foundation of Christ, with precious stones. Yes, Saint Thomas himself called it all “straw,” but that was by way of hyperbolic comparison with the reality of God.
These are assertions from faith. In any event Almighty God is ultimately beyond description and so authors can only reflect Him imperfectly.
None of which means Scripture can err. Almighty God, if He is Almighty, certainly can protect His Word against error, and did so, according to the Christian Faith, not only Catholic, and you do claim you are a Christian.