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NowAgnostic
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When First Cause cosmological arguments get to the end, they posit an Uncaused Cause, which is taken to be “God”; the word however is used equivocally. The necessary distinction is not made between God’s existence and God’s action. God’s existence is not the direct cause of the universe. His creative action is, and this would be uncaused unless one wishes to posit that His existence is the cause of His action. That would make His action logically necessary (since a necessary cause produces a necessary effect), and lead to modal collapse.
Now, if the universe is contingent, God’s creative action is also contingent. Which means, God’s creative action is a totally unexplained brute fact, an entity which exists without cause or explanation. Which means, ultimately, theism has no more explanatory power than atheism insofar as there is an unexplained brute fact. And, moreover, anything logically contingent cannot be a purely actual entity (since a purely actual entity, if it exists, exists necessarily) - thus God’s action cannot be purely actual, and the causal chain ends up with an eternal entity but one a mixture of potency and act.
The doctrine of divine simplicity, however, would make God’s existence identical to His action since He can have no real distinctions. In that case His action would be logically necessary as is His existence.
Now, if the universe is contingent, God’s creative action is also contingent. Which means, God’s creative action is a totally unexplained brute fact, an entity which exists without cause or explanation. Which means, ultimately, theism has no more explanatory power than atheism insofar as there is an unexplained brute fact. And, moreover, anything logically contingent cannot be a purely actual entity (since a purely actual entity, if it exists, exists necessarily) - thus God’s action cannot be purely actual, and the causal chain ends up with an eternal entity but one a mixture of potency and act.
The doctrine of divine simplicity, however, would make God’s existence identical to His action since He can have no real distinctions. In that case His action would be logically necessary as is His existence.