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Does God Exist 2

Does God Exist? – Aquinas Essay, Research Paper


Does God Exist? Since the beginning of time, man has been struggling to answer the question,


how did we get here? What or who was responsible for the creation of life and the cosmos? It


seemed natural to conclude that there must have been a higher power that created the reality


known by man. However, how does one prove the existence of such a God? This has been the


major preoccupation of theologians and philosophers which began several hundred years before


Jesus Christ, and has continued to be the subject of heated debate ever since. We readily accept


the universe and everything contained within it, but can’t seem to agree upon how it got here in


the first place. After all, stating that God exists and then actually proving His existence are two


different things, and the latter can prove to be a rather daunting task. Most early philosophers


maintained that God most certainly did exist and attempted to use scientific arguments to prove


their point. However, perhaps the most quoted philosopher on the absolute existence of God is


not a scientist, but rather, perhaps more appropriately, a theologian. St. Thomas Aquinas was a


student of philosophy and was influential in incorporating philosophy into the religious doctrine,


which provides the foundation for the modern-day Roman Catholic religious beliefs. Aquinas


examined the question of God’s existence in great detail in his philosophical works, Summa


Theologica and Summa Contra Gentiles. He wrote, “Beginning with sensible things, our intellect


is led to the point of knowing about God that He exists, and other such characteristics that must


be attributed to the First Principle” . Aquinas had the typical philosopher mentality by asserting


that it cannot be just merely accepted that God exists, since this contention is not immediately


evident. It is a declaration that must be proven. In other words, faith alone is not sufficient


enough evidence to conclude that God exists. Aquinas pointed out that what may be conceived in


the intellect does not necessarily exists in reality (Grace, 1996). To make his own case regarding


this issue, Aquinas established his five criteria on the existence of God through Summa


Theologica, the first three of which became known form the basis of the cosmological argument


confirming God’s existence. The five ways Aquinas used to confirm the existence of God all


stemmed from a first cause argument. In other words, life perpetuates itself as one cause prompts


the occurrence of an event that becomes the cause for a subsequent event and so on through


infinity. However, at some point, there had to be a first cause, which set these wheels into


motion, which is the being commonly referred to as God. In the First Way, Aquinas established


that everything that is finite undergoes change, and by following these successive changes, finite


man is eventually led to God. Until this happens, finite objects cannot be changed. Aquinas’


Second Way is based upon the theory of causality, which is a detailed explanation of how the


first cause is the only explanation for continual “cause and effect” of the universe. Next, Aquinas


established the criteria of a ‘necessity’ of being. In other words, something cannot come from


nothing. There had to be a transient being in place for all existence to evolve. He wrote, “We


find in nature things that are possible to be and not to be…. But it is impossible for these things


to always exist, for that which is possible not to be at some time is not. Therefore, if everything


is possible not to be, then at one time there could have been nothing in existence.” In other


words, if there were no existence historically, nothing would exist at the present time. Since


existence is not in question today, there must have been an eternal existence that started it all –


God. By the nineteenth century, philosophers were not quite so content to blindly accept the


existence of God. Certain skepticism began to prevail, and this was reflected in the philosophy of


the time period. Perhaps one of the most articulate spokesmen who argued against the existence


of God was British philosopher David Hume, the founder of the ’skeptical school of philosophy.’


He openly criticized Aquinas’ “first cause” theory as an ineffective argument, asking, “What was


the cause of the First Cause?”. He and others pointed out, quite rightly, if every occurrence


must have a cause, what makes anyone conclude that it began with God? There has never been a


valid argument establishing God as the ‘First Cause’ according to David Hume. Of course, it


should perhaps be pointed out that opponents of Hume have taken the theological “high road,”


maintaining that it is assumed that in the moral order, everything begins with God, and this is a


process that is beyond question. Furthermore, according to Hume, Aquinas’ argument is


philosophically flawed because he makes the assumption that the characteristics of the parts


equal the characteristics of the whole. In other words, just because some consequences in the


universe may be attributed to a cause does not mean that the entire universe can be traced to one


root cause. After all, if God is the cause of the universe, this means that God is a cause onto


Himself. Why can’t the creation of the universe be explained in similar terms? Remaining always


the skeptic, Hume’s argument stops short of claiming that God does not exist, which would be


atheism. Rather, he regarded his task as casting reasonable doubt as to whether or not God exists,


which is agnosticism. David Hume further expounded on his unconventional religious


philosophy in his 1757 essay, The Natural History of Religion. He suggested that people


continued to believe in the existence of God because they were conditioned to do so. Hume


wrote: Our ancestors in Europe, before the revival of letters, believed, as we do at present, that


there was one supreme God, the author of nature, whose power, though in itself uncontrollable,


was yet often exerted by the interposition of his angels and subordinate ministers, who executed


his sacred purposes. But they also believed, that all nature was full of other invisible powers,


fairies, goblins, elves, sprits, beings, stronger and mightier than men, but much inferior to the


celestial natures, who surround the throne of God. Hume’s implication is clear: If man did not


believe in the existence of God, he would incur considerable wrath from above. Hume continued


by asserting that literature had much to do with public perception of God and of His existence.


Ancient Greek poets bestowed upon their esteemed Gods human qualities they knew their


compatriots could easily relate to. It was this ‘ignorant’ ancient Greek view of God offered by the


Greek poets and Aristotle, upon which the God’s existence theory of Thomas Aquinas was based.


Hume asserted that the original faith placed in God’s existence grew from the uneducated masses


that developed the myth of an all-powerful Perfect Being who was responsible for the creation of


everything that could not be explained. These people could not explain such natural


phenomenons as lightning or earthquakes so they attributed them to some higher power. Today


there are empirical, scientific explanations for these occurrences. The possibility exists that


someday science will somehow be able to prove or disprove the theory that God exists. With


both points of view presented, which, if either, is correct? Aquinas’ argument, an admirable


model of deductive reasoning, is lacking in scientific validity. Hume argued, perhaps correctly,


that this historical description of a natural and moral order only grew from man’s desire to live an


ordered existence, not from God’s existence. People will forever be arguing around their dinner


tables about the existence of God. Many take comfort in the belief that there is one Creator who


still exists in the universe, a perfect being who watches out for His ‘imperfect’ children.


However, the argument that God exists because he was the ‘First Cause’ of everything is too


simplistic for the sophisticated intellect to accept. It may be spiritually comforting to believe in


the existence of a higher power, but there is no irrefutable evidence to suggest that God was ‘the


cause’ of everything, hence proving His existence. As we approach the new millennium,


skepticism prevails and continues to reign supreme.


Grace, R. Jeffrey. A Report on Summa Contra Gentiles Book One: God by Thomas Aquinas [Online]. October 1996. Available: http://www.electriciti.com/~rjgrace/scg.htm.


Hume, David. The Natural History of Religion [Online]. 1757. Available: http://www.utm.edu/research/hume/wri/nhr/nhr.


Porter, Burton F. (editor). Religion & Reason: An Anthology. New York: St. Martin’s Press, Inc., 1993.


Stairs, Allen. The Cosmological Argument [Online]. March 1998. Available: http://brindedcow.umd.edu/236/aquinas.html.


Titus, Harold H., and Smith, Marilyn S. Living Issues in Philosophy (Sixth Edition). New York: D. Van Nostrand Company, 1974.


Thompson, Karl F. (editor). Thomas Aquinas’ Summa Contra Gentiles. Classics of Western Thought: II. Middle Ages, Renaissance, and Reformation. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1973.

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