A
awatkins69
Guest
I have been thinking of the First Way of Saint Thomas. I think it can be stated clearly like this:
(1) Everything that is changing is being changed by something else.
(2) But the series of changers and things changing cannot be infinitely
long.
(3) There must be a first cause of all change.
I have three main objections, mainly directed against the first premise:
(1) Everything that is changing is being changed by something else.
(2) But the series of changers and things changing cannot be infinitely
long.
(3) There must be a first cause of all change.
I have three main objections, mainly directed against the first premise:
- It seems that what moves the will is the essence of happiness, which is certainly not changing, and which (prima facie) we do not identify with God. Of course, we can turn to the Fourth Way, but that means the First Way does not stand alone. Given a view of the will such as that of Bl. Duns Scotus, this clearly contradicts the first premise, it seems to me.
- In the same line of thinking of my first objection, it seems that appetible objects are unmoved movers. The pizza is the final cause of my action of going to the pizza shop.
- It also seems that natures are unmoved movers. For instance, the nature of atoms cause them to behave in certain ways, the nature of animals cause them to behave certain ways, etc. However, we usually do not call natures God, even though they are unmoved movers. In this situation we could turn to the Fifth Way, but again the First Way seems to fail alone.
- Newtonian physics seems to contradict the first premise. I know this is the most common objection, but I still do not quite understand how one could answer it. Change of location seems to me to be change in the strict sense as well. An object is potentially at point A, and then is actually at point A, even though it was not put there directly by something else (I think). This is a change from potentiality to actuality. A genuine change, it seems to me.