T
Touchstone
Guest
Interesting quote, thanks. That’s one I’ve not read. We have a “design reflex” as humans. We we see complexity, differentiation and integration, we intuitively make a “telic connection”; this is our nature as humans.Aquinas’ arguments, being limited to the limited philosophy and science of his day, have of course a foundational weakness in that sense. But his intuition, as I think you called it, was the foundation for his argument. It is the intuition that anyone can have, except those who choose to deny it.
Thomas Jefferson, in a letter to John Adams, fleshed out with more detail the “foundation” Aquinas had outlined in the teleological argument.
*The argument which they [the atheists] rest on as triumphant and unanswerable is that, in every hypothesis of cosmogony, you must admit an eternal pre-existence of something; and according to the rule of sound philosophy, you are never to employ two principles to solve a difficulty when one will suffice. They say, then, that it is more simple to believe at once in the eternal pre-existence of the world, as it is now going on, and may forever go on by the principle of reproduction which we see and witness, than to believe in the eternal pre-existence of an ulterior cause, or creator of the world, a being whom we see not, and know not, of whose form substance and mode or place of existence, or of action no sense informs us, no power of the mind enables us to delineate or comprehend. On the contrary, I hold (without appeal to revelation) that when we take a view of the Universe in its parts general or particular, it is impossible for the human mind not to perceive and feel a conviction of design, consummate skill, and infinite power in every atom of its composition. The movements of the heavenly bodies, so exactly held in their course by the balance centrifugal and centripetal forces, the structure of our earth itself, with its distribution of lands, waters, and atmosphere, animal and vegetable bodies, examined in all their minutest particles, insects mere atoms of life, yet as perfectly organized as man or mammoth, the mineral substances, the generation and uses, it is impossible, I say, for the human mind not to believe that there is, in all this, design, cause and effect, up to an ultimate cause, a fabricator of all things from matter and motion, their preserver and regulator while permitted to exist in their present forms, and their regenerator into new and other forms. We see too, evident proofs of the necessity of a superintending power to maintain the Universe in its course and order. Stars, well known, have disappeared, new ones have come into view, comets, in their incalculable courses, may run foul of suns and planets and require renovation under other laws; certain races of animals are become extinct; and, were there no restoring power, all existences might extinguish successively, one by one, until all should be reduced to a shapeless chaos. *
And I not that his last sentence fits nicely with secular science’s view; eventually, all will be reduced to a shapeless chaos, with the stars and everything else capitulating to entropy at long last, one by one.
I think at this point, we can see the outlines of the fundamental difference here, in terms of epistemology. As philosophical/epistemic principle, axioms (or more simply, unsubstantiated claims) are not admitted by simply observing that they are intuitive. Axiomata obtain only through necessity, or self-evidence (which is really just a form of necessity). Intuitions may be correct, and rigorous investigations often return results that validate the original intuition. But that is an *a posteriori *assigment. A priori, intuition carries no unassailable epistemic weight. Intuitively, we think a rock is “thoroughly solid”. And in an informal, macro-scale sense, indeed it is. But the reality of that rock is astonishingly counter-intuitive. There’s almost no actual “solid” to anything “solid”. “Solid” is a useful, practical, reliable illusion for the scale and speeds at which humans operate. But as a matter of knowledge, the intuition is actually a barrier to understanding, rather than an aid, on that question.
Thomistic philosophy, and other philosophies, assign unassailable epistemic weight to their metaphysics. Ask yourself, for example: what conditions would be necessary for Aquinas to conclude: Hey, my metaphysics are messed up! Aquinas, and fellow philosophers of his kind are incorrigible in that regard – ideas derived from intuition are “sublimated” to a point where they are axiomatic, and thus uncorrectable, unfalsifiable.
That’s a major, major liability in terms of rigorous thinking. This is where skepticism and methodical doubt pay spectacular dividends, epistemologically.
-Touchstone