Difference between revisions of "Cosmological Argument"

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'''The Cosmological Argument''', or '''“First Mover” Argument''' or '''"First Cause" Argument''' is the go-to argument for God’s existence, cited by both theologians and laymen of all denominations. In particular, Catholic philosophers tend to be predisposed to make Cosmological Arguments, since they are utterly convinced by them. Cosmological Arguments are the most popular arguments for God's existence,<ref name="Smith">G. H. Smith, ''Atheism:  The Case Against God'' (Prometheus Books (2016).<ref> and were cited by Christian evangelists of all denominations to persuade their own members, and are the primary tool apologists used against atheists. The Cosmological Argument is credited to [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Aquinas St. Thomas Aquinas],, as this argument is a refined combination of three of his five proofs for the existence of God listed in his ''magnum opus'',  [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summa_Theologica Summa Theologica].<ref name="Boghossian"> P. Boghossian, ''A Manual for Creating Atheists'' (Pitchstone Publishing, 2013).</ref>
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'''The Cosmological Argument''', or '''“First Mover” Argument''' or '''"First Cause" Argument''' is the go-to argument for God’s existence, cited by both theologians and laymen of all denominations. In particular, Catholic philosophers tend to be predisposed to make Cosmological Arguments, since they are utterly convinced by them. Cosmological Arguments are the most popular arguments for God's existence,<ref name="Smith">G. H. Smith, ''Atheism:  The Case Against God'' (Prometheus Books (2016).</ref> and were cited by Christian evangelists of all denominations to persuade their own members, and are the primary tool apologists used against atheists. The Cosmological Argument is credited to [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Aquinas St. Thomas Aquinas],, as this argument is a refined combination of three of his five proofs for the existence of God listed in his ''magnum opus'',  [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summa_Theologica Summa Theologica].<ref name="Boghossian"> P. Boghossian, ''A Manual for Creating Atheists'' (Pitchstone Publishing, 2013).</ref>
  
 
In its most general form, the Cosmological Argument states that the causality (i.e., the Law of Cause and Effect) dictates that a divine creator must exist in order to explain the creation of the universe. This creator, this “first mover,” is then assumed to be the God of Abraham. As such, the Cosmological Argument is an a priori (before-the-fact) variation of the Teleological Argument. [4] Cosmological Arguments are often used in conjunction with the Argument from Ignorance [5] and the God of the Gaps Argument,<ref name="Smith"></ref> since they answer mysteries with more mysteries, and thus answers nothing. The Cosmological Argument is commonly deduced from St. Thomas’ arguments, or restated as the Kalām Argument.  
 
In its most general form, the Cosmological Argument states that the causality (i.e., the Law of Cause and Effect) dictates that a divine creator must exist in order to explain the creation of the universe. This creator, this “first mover,” is then assumed to be the God of Abraham. As such, the Cosmological Argument is an a priori (before-the-fact) variation of the Teleological Argument. [4] Cosmological Arguments are often used in conjunction with the Argument from Ignorance [5] and the God of the Gaps Argument,<ref name="Smith"></ref> since they answer mysteries with more mysteries, and thus answers nothing. The Cosmological Argument is commonly deduced from St. Thomas’ arguments, or restated as the Kalām Argument.  

Revision as of 14:48, 2 July 2017

The Cosmological Argument, or “First Mover” Argument or "First Cause" Argument is the go-to argument for God’s existence, cited by both theologians and laymen of all denominations. In particular, Catholic philosophers tend to be predisposed to make Cosmological Arguments, since they are utterly convinced by them. Cosmological Arguments are the most popular arguments for God's existence,[1] and were cited by Christian evangelists of all denominations to persuade their own members, and are the primary tool apologists used against atheists. The Cosmological Argument is credited to St. Thomas Aquinas,, as this argument is a refined combination of three of his five proofs for the existence of God listed in his magnum opus, Summa Theologica.[2]

In its most general form, the Cosmological Argument states that the causality (i.e., the Law of Cause and Effect) dictates that a divine creator must exist in order to explain the creation of the universe. This creator, this “first mover,” is then assumed to be the God of Abraham. As such, the Cosmological Argument is an a priori (before-the-fact) variation of the Teleological Argument. [4] Cosmological Arguments are often used in conjunction with the Argument from Ignorance [5] and the God of the Gaps Argument,[1] since they answer mysteries with more mysteries, and thus answers nothing. The Cosmological Argument is commonly deduced from St. Thomas’ arguments, or restated as the Kalām Argument.

Aquinas’ relevant proofs for the existence of God consisted of arguments:[2]

  1. Motion. Since nothing moves by itself, there must be a “first mover” who set the universe into motion.
  2. Causality. Every effect can be traced back to some cause, which in turn has its own cause. This causal regression must lead back to a “first cause” which set all events into motion.
  3. Possibility and Necessity. Everything in existence had previously not-existed at some point. However, if nothing existed, it would not be possible for everything to be brought into existence. Therefore, a creator must necessarily exist in order to create everything.

The Kalām Argument is more straightforward, taking on the form of a syllogism: [3]

  • All existing things have a beginning and a cause.
  • The universe has a beginning.
  • Therefore, the universe has a cause.

Each of these arguments has a few common shortcomings, which are listed in order of importance:

  • Cosmological Arguments require ad hoc reasoning to avoid infinite regressions. Who moved the First Mover? What caused the first cause? If a creator necessarily exists, then who created him? While apologists may claim that God had no cause, or that he was only an effect, but this only highlights the problem -- the Cosmological Arguments tries to make a causal argument based upon the non-existence of causality.[4] If God always existed, and therefore needs no causal explanation, then the original premise of the Cosmological Argument --that everything needs a cause -- is false, since something can exist without a cause. If everything except God requires a cause, then the Cosmological Argument becomes ad hoc (i.e., inconsistent and prejudicially applied) and is thus logically impermissible, and unable to advance our understanding of universal causation. [5]
  • There is nothing specifically Christian about the Cosmological Argument. The Cosmological Argument offers no clues to the identity and origin of the “first mover”; this could equally refer to any god from any religion, the collaborative effort of several gods, or some not-yet-understood physical phenomena. [6]
  • Non-existence is assumed to be the default state. Existence of the universe as a proof of divinity only works under the assumption that non-existence is the default state. What if the universe always existed by default? [5]
    • While apologists will oppose this notion, it is no better, worse, or different than assuming that God also had no cause. [5] If God’s existence can be self-caused, then why can’t the world be self-caused? [6]

Bibliography


[3] D. Barker, Godless. [4] D. Barker, Losing Faith in Faith. [5] Atheist Universe. [6] C. o. God. [7] S. Hitchcock, Disbelief 101.

[8] D. Hume, Dialogues and Natural History of Religion.
  1. 1.0 1.1 G. H. Smith, Atheism: The Case Against God (Prometheus Books (2016).
  2. 2.0 2.1 P. Boghossian, A Manual for Creating Atheists (Pitchstone Publishing, 2013).