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Linusthe2nd
Guest
Now this is the best post you have ever made and it only cost you a dozen and a half words. I would highly recommend that everyone posting here read the two links referenced, especially the second ( but to understand the second, you have to read the firstI found these two articles by Edward Feser helpful concerning quantum mechanics and causality:
edwardfeser.blogspot.co.uk/2012/05/oerter-on-universals-and-causality.html
edwardfeser.blogspot.co.uk/2012/05/oerter-contra-principle-of-causality.html
This segment from the second link is the most important. But you see, objectors here will not devote the necessary time to puzzle through something so lengthy and complecated!!! They never have and never will - because they are ideologues - as Feser often points out. The following bit is extracted from the second link.
" An interpretation of QM that is both Aristotelian and realist will, naturally, insist that it is not the laws of QM themselves that cause anything, since they are mere abstractions from concrete systems operating in accordance with their substantial forms. Hence it is in virtue of the substantial form of a hydrogen atom that it will behave in the manner described by QM, just as it is by virtue of the substantial forms of material things in general that they will exert a gravitational attraction on one another. Now for the Aristotelian, the substantial form of an inanimate substance is not the efficient cause of its natural operations; rather, those operations flow “spontaneously” from it, precisely because it is in the nature of the substance to operate in those ways. (See James Weisheipl’s Nature and Motion in the Middle Ages for an important treatment of the subject.) Hence that a planet exerts a gravitational pull is just something it does by virtue of its nature or substantial form; it does not need a continuously operating efficient cause to make it exert such a pull. That does not mean that there is in no sense an efficient cause of a thing’s natural operations, but that efficient cause is just that which gave the substance in question its substantial form in the first place, i.e. that which generated the substance or brought it into being. It is not something that needs continuously to operate after the thing is brought into being. Hence the efficient cause of a planet’s exerting a gravitational pull on other objects is just whatever natural processes brought that planet into existence millions of years ago, thereby giving it the nature or substantial form it has. Its exerting that pull is now something it just does “spontaneously,” by virtue of its nature. (Mind you, that does not mean that it can exist or operate even for a moment without a divine sustaining cause; it cannot do so, for reasons I spell out in my ACPQ article … "
Linus2nd