The “first-cause” argument for God may be one of the most
blatantly fallacious arguments ever devised.
The argument, to compress it into a categorical syllogism,
begins by proposing that “everything has a cause.” It then submits that the universe itself must
have a cause and concludes that this cause must be God.
The argument is ridiculous on several grounds and, in fact,
is rendered untenable by its own internal reasoning. Following the logic of the premise that
everything must have a cause, God too must have a cause and the cause of God
must have a cause and so on to infinity.
If God does not require a cause then the first premise, everything has a
cause, is false.
The above is the most popular form of the argument, known in
philosophy as the “cosmological argument”; however, there are more sophisticated
versions (to loosely use the term).
Some have refined the first premise to state, instead of
everything has a cause, that everything contingent, or everything caused, has a
cause (nothing more than an observation of the trivially true). This qualified first premise places itself
beyond criticism and requires a closer analyzing of the second premise and the
conclusion.
The second premise, refined, states that the universe is
contingent and must have a cause.
However, there has never been a serious argument to sustain this
premise. Bertrand Russell rhetorically
asks “[j]ust because everything in the universe is contingent, must the
universe itself be contingent?”
The best argument considers time. It is argued that were the universe to have
always existed the very fact would require an infinite amount of time to have
already passed and that this would be contradictory and thus impossible because
an infinite amount of time would never pass (the passing of an infinite cycle
of time would never, by definition, be completed).
The problem with the argument predicated upon time has been
known since at least the work on General and Special Relativity by Albert
Einstein. Einstein calculated that time
itself is relative and can be warped.
The Big Bang hypothesis, proposed due to the Doppler Effect, suggests
that the observable universe was produced by the explosion of a dense, hot
initial state of gravitational singularity and has been offered by many a
theologian as support for the cosmological argument’s second premise. While current work on this is pure
speculation, the best guesses by the most acclaimed physicists in the field
point out that time is the relative fourth dimension of the universe created by
the Big Bang and that time more or less dissolves the closer it gets to the
gravitational singularity. Discussion of
time with regards to the origins of the universe and the Big Bang may very well
be nonsensical.
The second premise cannot currently be verified one way or
the other and cannot therefore sustain conclusions. While work is still being conducted on the
nature and origins of the cosmos it is beyond rash to draw any definitive
statements and arguments about it, which is why the conclusion only further
exacerbates current work. While it
remains unknown why there is something rather than nothing it only confounds
this question to introduce the further problem of why and how there is also God.
The conclusion now looms.
The first obvious problem with the conclusion is that a sufficient
reason is not given as to why God must be the cause. It would be as logical to argue that extra-dimensional
space aliens were the first cause or that the universe is the product of the
functioning of a super-computer.
Furthermore, the argument only establishes a first-cause in
the past; it does not demonstrate the continued existence of this
first-cause. The argument that
everything contingent must be caused does not demonstrate that the first-cause
continues to exist presently or eternally and it does not elaborate any
qualities of the first-cause (such as life, consciousness and so on) which
undermines the very purpose of the argument.
The argument against an eternal universe being contradictory because of
the paradox of an infinite cycle of time concluding equally applies to an
eternal God.
The essential points about this argument are relatively
elementary and the fallacies readily identifiable to anyone who takes time to
consider them rationally. This is why
there are only ever illiterate charlatans who invoke the argument and never any
serious philosophers, at least since St. Thomas Aquinas, and when viewing his
philosophical work against the great works of philosophy, it seems to pale in
comparison.
9 comments:
I've heard the "God as first cause" argument before, and this is a good argument against it. It's hypocritical to say we know there must be a God because there had to be a first cause for everything without also accounting for what "caused" God in the first place.
More elaborate theories of the universe do eliminate the "first cause" theory, in the form of the need for a chain of causes with a starting point in time.
They don't, however, answer "what caused the multiverse to exist at all", a version of the question "why is there anything" I suppose. Thinking of God as outside of time completely has been one standard theological view for a very long time.
Eli, since God is defined to be without cause, it is not logical to ask what caused God. It is entirely reasonable, to Hume's question "Who made God?" to answer "nobody".
This is not to say that defining God this way proves God's existence, it doesn't, but the first cause argument is not defeated as easily as you suggest.
I already addressed the issues you raise in my original post Rudy:
"The second premise, refined, states that the universe is contingent and must have a cause. However, there has never been a serious argument to sustain this premise. Bertrand Russell rhetorically asks '[j]ust because everything in the universe is contingent, must the universe itself be contingent?'”
I also explained that time is but only a relative fourth dimension and itself came into being after the big bang. As I wrote in the post:
"While current work on this is pure speculation, the best guesses by the most acclaimed physicists in the field point out that time is the relative fourth dimension of the universe created by the Big Bang and that time more or less dissolves the closer it gets to the gravitational singularity. Discussion of time with regards to the origins of the universe and the Big Bang may very well be nonsensical."
You say that one could answer the question "who made god?" with the answer "nobody," but it is more than clear that there is no evidence to sustain such an answer. It is further clear that the very same answer could be given, as I mentioned in the post, to the universe itself. "Who made the universe?" "Nobody."
These things work both ways obviously.
As I also already said in my post, when one falsely and without any evidence or reason answers the question "what caused the multiverse to exist at all?" with "God," one is only further confounding the elementary question "why is there something rather than nothing?" As I said in my original post:
"While it remains unknown why there is something rather than nothing it only confounds this question to introduce the further problem of why and how there is also God."
In this unnecessary scenario we must now account not only for the universe's existence, but for God's existence as well and not only for God's existence, but God's existence in relation to the universe and the causal relationship therein.
When you admit that, departing the first premise of the cosmological argument, walking back the claim that everything has a cause, without evidence or reason suggesting that God is without cause, does not prove "God's existence." You realize that.
What you don't realize is that you are thereby acknowledging that the first premise of the argument (everything has a cause) is, in fact, refuted which means that the entire argument is refuted. With a syllogism, any refutation of any premise leads to the refutation of the entire argument. That's how this works.
I will be specific. This is so for two reasons. First, because you have done away with the first premise and, as any elementary understanding of logic will show, when the premises do not hold the conclusion falls. Put simply, if everything must have a cause, then God too must have a cause. If God does not need a cause then the first premise that says everything must have a cause is false. Secondly, the argument is meant to prove the existence of god, that is the reason for its formulation, but, as you even admit, the argument fails to do so which, by definition, means that it is "defeated."
Thank your for reading, thinking and commenting.
Sorry, your argument is fallacious. I'm going to write an essay refuting your whole thing and put it on my blogs. But I say this respectfully as I too am a socialist. We may be comrades politically. Yet I disagree philosophically with your view. I would like to start a dialogue in good will. I'll send you the link when I get the essay up.
In the mean time I'll comment on one aspect. It is not fallacious to say that the universe needs a cause but God does not. The argument does not assume that everythi8nhg needs a cause but that all things not God are contingent and created by God. That is just understood in the argument.
(1) All things cojtingent need causes
(2) God is not contingent
(3) Therefore God does not need a cause
(4) Infinite cause regression (ICR) is impossible
(5)because ICR is impossible the chain of c/e must begin with a first or final cause.
(6) that final cause by definition can't be caused itself or it would not be final
(7) "GOD" is the trm we use to designate this final cause. therefore there must be a God
are afraid the truth will come out. I am answering your Bs on Atheist watch and you come there and argue or you know you lied.
I get it, you are a Stalinist! that' why you would not post my comment. I'm a Trot.
Joe Hinman,
I appreciate your interest in my blog, but you didn't do a very good job reading this post that you wish to dispute. I already addressed your fallacious premises within my initial post. I addressed your first premise within the first several paragraphs: "The second premise, refined, states that the universe is contingent and must have a cause. However, there has never been a serious argument to sustain this premise. Bertrand Russell rhetorically asks '[j]ust because everything in the universe is contingent, must the universe itself be contingent?'"
I'm not afraid of fallacious religious nonsequiturs and wishful delusions. I've had to implement comment moderation after my blog was attacked by a slew of trolls and fascists.
You clearly don't get it and you clearly haven't read any of my political posts as I'm to the left of Karl Marx, let alone any of the Bolsheviks.
Thanks for reading, thinking and commenting.
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