Aquinas like Aristotle affirmed that all knowledge ultimately comes to us through the senses. Inductive reasoning and deductive reasoning are two different ways or methods by which we come to know things. Deduction has always been the more certain of the two methods, assuming that the premises involved are true. So I don’t agree with you that Aristotle’s reasoning is built upon induction. That being said, of course induction is vitally important for us to know things about the world. I never said otherwise. All I set out to demonstrate is that your inferences from inductive evidence are simply not valid. They violate the informal deductive principles (fallacy of false alternatives).
Of course Aristotle affirmed the value of deductive reasoning, and of course I didn’t mean to imply he didn’t. I simply noted that his conclusion (omnipotence is logically necessary) was an inference made through inductive reasoning. Geesh!
Not necessary for what? I’m guessing for creation of the universe. Maybe you are right, depending upon how you define “omnipotence.” But the fact is something had to create the conditions for the universe. Everything that exists has a cause. I suspect it is this latter proposition that you disagree with .
Great, I’m glad you agree; omnipotence isn’t a necessary assumption (and that’s all I’m saying). Omnipotence is the ability to do anything, with absolutely no limitations whatsoever (this is the definition according to Aristotle anyway).
As for the idea that everything requires a cause, well of course everything requires a cause, but that doesn’t prove god. We can say at the end of the chain of causation there has to be something that itself wasn’t caused, but energy could easily fit within that criteria. I’m not saying it does, and I’m not even saying god doesn’t exist; I’m simply saying the weight of evidence suggests a more reasonable assumption is god is not omnipotent (at least not in the classical sense of the word).
Easy to conclude, but as we have seen, difficult for you to defend. It doesn’t matter from your perspective whether things are created ex nihilo or not. You would find limitations with God even if all creative acts were ex nihilo, because then quite obviously (from your standpoint) God would lack the ability to allow creative acts from existing matter and material. Again, I suspect that what you really object to is the proposition that everything that exists has a cause.
Garbage, how can you conclude I would find limitations with god even if he created ex nihilo.
It is not as a general rule fallacious to assert an absolute. Your very statement that “as a general rule, it’s fallacious to assert an absolute” is itself an affirmation of an absolute. Furthermore, although omnipotence (depending upon how it is defined) may not be a necessary assumption, the proposition that “everything that exists has a cause” is a necessary assumption from all empirical evidence at our disposal. You say “no,” but you are mistaken.
Geesh, here you go again trying to put words in my mouth. A general rule is not an absolute rule; it’s something that’s usually true. If I meant absolute rule then I would have said absolute rule, or I would have implied necessity, or that it was a universal law, or words to that effect. When someone frames something in a context like “generally speaking” when A happens B usually follows, obviously it’s not asserting an absolute.
Aquinas’ Cosmological Argument does not require any kind of prior conceptualization - entailing a person who is conceptualizing it all. That is an argument by design, which isn’t the argument at issue here even though Aquinas did profer an argument by design. The proposition is this: everything that exists has a cause.
And if we were talking about Aquinas’ cosmological argument this might matter. Again, as noted above, this simple causative principal isn’t something I necessarily dispute (although there’s plenty of little nuances we could quibble about within this idea … but that’s a different issue; now hopefully the red herring train will stop at the station, let’s see).
Evolutionary science provides no evidence that causation is not required for existence or change. In fact, it proves the exact opposite. I am quite comfortable with the conclusions of most evolutionary theories.
Great I’m glad for you. Now with any luck maybe you’re next statement will be relevant to this issue?
You have conflated concepts. While Aquinas and Aristotle may have made teleological arguments for the existence of God, that is not the issue. The issue is whether something can come into existence without a cause. Both Aquinas and Aristotle said that a cause is required. Please give your one example.
NO that’s not the issue. The issue is whether or not everything created requires conceptualization. If it doesn’t, and things can be created through random process, then energy is just as good an explanation of
first cause as anything else (at least given the information currently available).
Yes, we do know. According to mathematical set theory, an actual existing infinite is impossible. It is also highly improbable (and when I use that phrase, I mean practically impossible) from scientific observation that something has always existed without a preceding cause. I’m on the side of deductive and inductive reasoning. You are on the side of fairy tales.
I hate to point the obvious, but under your logic, god is impossible. Nonetheless, mathematicians generally accept actual infinities, so what the heck are you talking about?
Moreover, the first law of thermodynamics tells us energy cannot be created or destroyed. You better do some homework
