Thank you Leela, you answered much of what I was going to have to before I could get home to do it : ).
However, in response to masterjedi:
1.) I firmly believe we have, as we will discuss.
2.) He does have an argument from design, it is his 5th. The final goal is achieved through design and designed in itself, which is why he argues there must be a “Designer.” Here are the arguments–>
mnstate.edu/gracyk/courses/web%20publishing/aquinasFiveWays_ArgumentAnalysis.htm
This, however, is not our main point of discussion, so let’s ignore it for now : ).
Onto the unnumbered points. You say that,“You can still have an ordered series of simultaneous causes…” which is an utter fallacy. An ordered series
requires causes that are not simultaneous. I’m not discounting the possibility of a simultaneous cause, for that would be ridiculous, but an ordered regress cannot by definition have simultaneous events. Series means (
dictionary.com): “A group or a number of related or similar things, events, etc… occurring in sequence.” WIthout time there is no sequence, thus without time there is no
series. This is not to say there is no causality, but there is no more ordered regression before time began. By definition this is impossible. At the very least, at the beginning of the regression is the group of all things that occurred before time, all as a single event on the regress, not as a series.
“Aquinas would never agree that anything that had a beginning could be “causeless”.”… What? He postulates God, thus does just this. If you say God is infinite, then we can arbitrarily assign that quality to the Universe as well, eliminating the necessity for God this argument relies upon. My last point on this subject will be that whether we discuss simultaneous or temporal causality, there is no need to postulate God to begin either of these. This simultaneous causality can be explained by the Universe being infinite, QM, the Big Bang, String Theory… etc.
You are correct that I misinterpreted Aquinas’s argument from design, and I apologize: I was mixing it with other arguments that I have heard in the past. However, I see no merit in this argument anyway, for it is extremely pretentious to think that every single natural body has an ultimate goal. How can we ever hope to prove that?
About the 4th (yes, it’s the fourth, my bad) argument: One of the principles–> “Predications of degree require reference to the “uttermost” case (e.g., a thing is said to be hotter according as it more nearly resembles that which is hottest).” Is ridiculous. And this is the principle this argument is built on. This simply incorrect, a comparison can be made between the same quality on two separate entities without any maximum. The Theory of Relativity uses this, as does everyone in every day life. How fast something is going is in comparison to your own frame of reference, not an ultimate.
I apologize for my former “thin” statement, I was just excited thanks to new experimental avenues : ).
Thanks