In his First Way, Aquinas argues that as we trace back the sequence of movers from effect to cause, we get to a first unmoved mover, and this is God.
But need the unmoved mover thus reached in the sequence of movers be God? Imagine this scenario. God creates some material beings, as well as an unchanging, timeless and immaterial demiurge that has the power to make the material beings move—and indeed exercises that power. Then if we were to trace back the sequence of movers, the unmoved mover we would get to would be the demiurge, not God. This demiurge would have potentiality, but not a temporal potentiality, so it would not be itself in motion, and hence it would be an unmoved mover.
This doesn’t deeply affect the argument, since Aquinas could do the same thing as he does in the Third Way, where he traces contingent beings to a necessary being, and then considers the possibility of necessary beings that get their necessity from other beings, and traces it back to an absolutely necessary being, namely God. Similarly, God could say that any unmoved mover that has some potentiality or contingency depends on a prior being and so on, and in the end we would get to God anyway.
Indeed, even in this scenario with a demiurge, we might want to say that it is God and not the demiurge who is the first unmoved mover. For God would still be a mover, albeit working through the demiurge who is a secondary cause, and God would be unmoved, and God would be first. So Aquinas would still be correct that the “first mover” is God—it’s just that the scenario suggests that Aquinas does skip a step.
2 comments:
Do you have a preferred interpretation of the first way? Most of the readings I've seen are hard to make sense of and/or dialectically ineffective (depending as they often do on metaphysical claims that basically no non-Thomist is going to accept).
Here's my simpleminded way to think about it.
1. There are two kinds of causes: (a) those that pass change on and (b) those that originate change.
2. You can't have only causes of type (a).
3. So you have a cause of type (b).
You can put a bunch of Thomistic metaphysics into an argument for (2), but (2) is just really intuitive. A fruitcake can't be just passed around: it needs to originate. Ditto change.
I just realized when writing this up that there is an interesting gap between (3) and an unmoved mover.
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