logical bob
Member
It's a standard argument in favour of theism and I've already seen it a number of times on this forum. Everything that happens must have a cause, so what is the cause of the universe? A scientist might say it was the Big Bang, but then what caused the Big Bang? We need God to be the ultimate cause which explains everything else. This is an argument with a long history. It's essentially the second of the Five Ways of St Thomas Aquinas.
But what if I then ask what causes God? Clearly nothing causes God. You could say that God is a logical necessity or that he exists outside of space and time or that he is causa sui, self causing. These are all different ways of saying that God doesn't need a cause, he just is.
So to summarise we have:
Starting point: everything must have a cause
Conclusion: something exists which doesn't need a cause.
I can’t be alone in noticing a problem here. The conclusion directly contradicts the starting point. If this argument proves anything, it’s that the starting point is wrong. It’s not the case that everything must have a cause.
Some things just are. Why shouldn't the universe be one of them?
But what if I then ask what causes God? Clearly nothing causes God. You could say that God is a logical necessity or that he exists outside of space and time or that he is causa sui, self causing. These are all different ways of saying that God doesn't need a cause, he just is.
So to summarise we have:
Starting point: everything must have a cause
Conclusion: something exists which doesn't need a cause.
I can’t be alone in noticing a problem here. The conclusion directly contradicts the starting point. If this argument proves anything, it’s that the starting point is wrong. It’s not the case that everything must have a cause.
Some things just are. Why shouldn't the universe be one of them?