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  • Nothing gets people talking like proving the existence of God -- just look at the comments on our last video.

  • And that is what Anselm of Canterbury did. He claimed, in the 11th century,

  • to have come up with deductive proof of God’s existence, through what we now know as the ontological argument.

  • And, if there was such a thing as a social network of medieval Christian philosophers

  • back then, it was positively abuzz with the news. For a long time. Because, almost 200

  • years later, Italian theologian and philosopher Thomas Aquinas encountered Anselm’s argument.

  • But, like many others, he just didn’t buy it.

  • Aquinas did believe in God. It was just that, as a philosopher, he felt that it was important

  • to have evidence for your beliefs. He knew that if he was going to dismiss Anselm’s

  • argument, he’d need to come up with something better. So, he set out to construct five arguments

  • that would prove God’s existence, once and for all.

  • Yeah, five. Apparently, he was concerned one wasn’t going to do it, so he figured that,

  • out of five, one was bound to stick.

  • His first four arguments are known together as the cosmological arguments, as they seek

  • to prove God’s existence through what he argued were necessary facts about the universe.

  • So, in keeping with the method that we discussed in our very first episode, were going to

  • examine these first four arguments of Thomas Aquinas -- and really try to understand them.

  • And then well consider their merits… ...and their weaknesses.

  • [Theme Music]

  • Maybe the most striking thing about the cosmological arguments of Aquinas, at least to modern eyes,

  • is that some of them are firmly based in the natural world. Even though he lived in a pretty

  • unscientific time, Aquinas argued for the existence of God through his understanding

  • of science, and with the help of what he thought was physical evidence.

  • For example, the first of his cosmological arguments is known as the Argument from Motion.

  • In it, Aquinas observed that we currently live in a world in which things are moving.

  • And he also observed that movement is caused by movers -- things that cause motion. Aquinas

  • was convinced that everything that’s moving must have been set into motion by something

  • else that was moving. By this logic, something must have started the motion in the first place.

  • Otherwise, you’d be stuck in a philosophical quandary known as an infinite regress.

  • You get an infinite regress when, in a chain of reasoning, the evidence for each point along

  • the chain relies on the existence of something that came before it, which in turn relies

  • on something even further back, and so on, with no starting point.

  • Basically, Aquinas thought the very idea of infinite regress was absurd, logically impossible.

  • Because, it implied that any given series of events began withnothing. Or, more accurately,

  • never really began. Instead, it could have been going on forever.

  • In the case of physical motion, Aquinas wanted to trace the cause of the movement he saw

  • in the world all the way back to its beginning. And he figured there MUST have been a beginning.

  • Otherwise, for him, it would be like watching these blocks fall, and being told that nothing

  • ever pushed over the first block. Instead, they had always been falling down forever,

  • backward into eternity. There must have been a time when nothing was in motion, Aquinas

  • thought, and there also mustve been a static being that started the motion. And that being,

  • according to Aquinas, is Godthe Unmoved Mover.

  • So his Argument From Motion ran something like this:

  • Objects are in motion Everything in motion was put into motion by

  • something else There can’t be an infinite regress of movers

  • So there must have been a first mover, itself unmoved, and that is God

  • Now, the second cosmological argument of Aquinas was a lot like his first one.

  • Here, he proposed the Argument from Causation, and it, too, sets out to avoid the problem of an infinite regress.

  • But instead of it explaining the motion of objects, it set out to explain causes

  • and effects, in general, all over the universe.

  • The argument went along these lines: Some things are caused

  • Anything that’s caused has to be caused by something else (since nothing causes itself)

  • There can’t be an infinite regress of causes

  • So there must have been a first causer, itself uncaused, and that is God

  • Just like with the Argument from Motion, the point here is pretty simple: Effects have causes.

  • If you think about how you wound up watching this video, you can trace the line of causation back,

  • from moment to moment. If you think about it long enough, you can probably go pretty far back.

  • But Aquinas said, again: It can’t go back forever. There had to be a First Thing that

  • started off the chain of causes and effects. And that Thing is God.

  • Argument number three was the Argument from Contingency. And we should step back and get

  • a little background for this one. In philosophy, we often distinguish between necessary beings

  • and contingent beings. A contingent being is, simply put, any being that could have not existed.

  • That includes you. Sure, you do exist, but you could not have.

  • If you had never been born, the world would go on. And yes, things would be differentweve

  • all seen It’s A Wonderful Lifebut the world would go on. Instead, your existence

  • is merely contingent on the existence of other things. In your case, you only exist because

  • a certain sperm met a certain egg and swapped some genetic information. Youre basically a fluke.

  • But what does that have to do with God? Well, again, Aquinas believed that there had to

  • be something that prevented an infinite regress of contingency. That would mean that the contingency

  • on which everything existed would just keep going back in time. And we can’t have a

  • world where everything is contingent, Aquinas said, because then -- by definition -- it

  • all could easily have never existed. So he needed at least one necessary being

  • a being that has always existed, that always will exist, and that can’t not exist, in

  • order to get everything going. And that necessary being is God.

  • Aquinas spelled out the reasoning of his Argument from Contingency this way:

  • There are contingent things Contingent things can cause other contingent

  • things, but there can’t only be contingent things

  • Because that would mean that there’s an infinite regress of contingency, and a possibility

  • that nothing might have existed An infinite regress is impossible

  • So there must be at least one necessary thing, and that is God

  • Let that marinate in your brain for a minute while unpack the next argument.

  • This one is built on the idea that we simply need a measuring stick in order to understand the value of things.

  • Good/bad, big/small, hot/coldnone of these concepts can exist in isolation.

  • If you go out for a walk and you see an animal, and it’s like this big, that animal would

  • be on the small side if it turned out to be a dog. But if it were a rat, that would be HUGE.

  • How do we know? Because we gauge the size of things in terms of other things.

  • The same idea applies to more abstract concepts, like your grades. How do we know that an A is good?

  • Because it’s at the top -- we know that there are grades lower than an A, but nothing higher.

  • And Aquinas thought that all of our value concepts would just be floating randomly in

  • space if there weren’t some anchorsomething that defined the value of everything else,

  • by being perfectand that, again, is God.

  • This is how Aquinas developed Number four, known as Argument from Degrees.

  • Properties come in degrees In order for there to be degrees of perfection,

  • there must be something perfect against which everything else is measured

  • God is the pinnacle of perfection

  • Ok, so weve considered Aquinasfour cosmological arguments. But remember, that’s

  • only step one. The next, and equally important step in philosophy, is critical evaluation.

  • So what do we make ofem?

  • As philosophers, if you think an argument is flawed, it’s your job to try and figure out why.

  • And by and large, philosopherstheists and atheists alikehave been relatively

  • unimpressed by these four, having found many problems in them.

  • For one thing, these arguments don’t seem to establish the existence of any particular god.

  • Even if the arguments are correct, it doesn’t look like Aquinas gets us to the

  • personal, loving God that many people pray to. Instead, were left with unmoved movers

  • and uncaused causers who seem to have little in common with the God of Abraham, Isaac,

  • and Jacob ... the God who feels emotions, and cares about his creation, and answers prayers.

  • Basically, this objection says that Aquinasgod is so far removed from the

  • god that theists actually believe in, that it doesn’t help anything.

  • But maybe youre happy just believing someone’s out there. That’s fine.

  • But then how about multiple someones?

  • Becauseguess whatAquinasarguments don’t rule out polytheism. There’s nothing

  • in any of his arguments to prove that God isn’t actually, like, a committee. Aquinas

  • cosmological arguments also don’t prove the existence of a sentient God. So, it might

  • be an old guy with a beard. It might be six old guys with beards. But it also might be

  • an egg, or a turtle, or just a big block of stone.

  • These observations have made some philosophers uncomfortable with Aquinasultimate conclusion.

  • But there are two objections that are thought by some to be real nails in its coffin.

  • The first is simply that Aquinas was wrong in his insistence that there can’t be an

  • infinite regress of anything. Aquinas takes it as a given that there had to be a starting

  • point for everything -- whether it’s the movement of objects, or causes and effects,

  • or contingent beings being created. But it’s unclear that this is true, or why it has to be true.

  • If infinite regress can be possible, then Aquinasfirst two arguments fall apart.

  • But perhaps the most significant charge made against Aquinasarguments is that theyre

  • self-defeating -- that is, they actually prove themselves wrong.

  • For example: If Aquinas is right that everything must have been put in motion by something else,

  • and everything must have a cause other than itself, then it seems that God should

  • be subject to those same stipulations. And if God is somehow exempt from those rules,

  • then why couldn’t other things be exempt from them too? If they can exist without God

  • being responsible them, then we don’t need God to establish things in the first place.

  • All right, I’ve given you a lot to think about.

  • So before we close, let’s pause and remind ourselves about a couple of things.

  • First, you can accept a conclusion but reject an argument. So you might agree with Aquinas

  • that God exists, but think none of his arguments prove it.

  • Second, if you disagree with an argument, you don’t get to just say, “yeah, youre wrong.”

  • You have to give a counterargument. What did Aquinas get wrong, and how can you do better?

  • Why are your reasons superior to his? Remember, philosophy is a dialectic.

  • Yes, Aquinas has been dead for centuries. But he started a conversation. And you get to participate

  • in that when you engage with his arguments, and offer your own, either in an effort to help him out

  • by fixing flaws in his arguments while preserving his conclusionor by refuting his entire project.

  • This is what it means to do philosophyto engage with arguments about stuff that matters.

  • And whether or not there’s a God seems to matter quite a bit, particularly in the lives of theists.

  • Today weve learned about cosmological arguments, and considered four of them. Next time, well

  • look at Aquinasfifth argument, the teleological argument.

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