Vlad,
You really have got your twaddle-o-meter dialled up to 11 today haven’t you…
I think Aquinus moved to calling the necessary entity God because he had considered what the properties of the necessary entity must logically be to avoid contingency and found them to align with the God of Abraham Hence his statement made having philosophically and logically arrived at a necessary being.”and we call this God”.
Aquinas’s argument has long since been falsified, oftentimes here in fact. That you ignore the falsifications you're given doesn’t make them go away.
Today we are agnostic culturally but it is largely down to politeness and an automatic and on going suspension of judgment.
Gibberish. It’s because more people
do apply judgement than used to be the case that we’re much less a theocratic society than we once were. Depressingly though, lots of other countries are theocracies, with attendant institutionalised misogyny, human rights abuses, poor educational levels etc.
Also as we have seen these are also down to a strange deference for scientists as if they were priests…
And your evidence for that unqualified claim would be what exactly? Broadly people defer to
science, not scient
ists – and for the good reason that it’s most reliable means we’ve yet found to understand the phenomena we experience and observe.
…and a strange but flexible relationship with empirical evidence where one minute we are appealing to it as paramount and the next minute we are arguing from what might be in the vast unknown expanse out there.
Naturally you have an example to back up that claim right? Yet again – people here don’t argue that something is on the basis of what might be (that’s your territory remember?); rather they merely say that you cannot discount the possible to justify your various claims and assertions.
Add to this an atheism particularly of the not wanting god variety and you have an anti philosophical push against the principle of sufficient reason, the necessary entity and support for the dubious brute fact, the contingency of everything and infinite regress.
You’ve a had all of the various mistakes here corrected many items already, and ignored or straw manned those corrections. What then would be the point of doing it again? Suffice it to say that the only atheism you’ve encountered here is coherent, logically cogent and philosophically supported. That’s why you can never lay a glove on it, so resort instead to your various dodges.
Regards Aquinus and Aristotle, the similarities just reflect what happens when you have to reduce abrahamic religion to philosophy.
What would you propose instead – just guessing (or, as you call it, “faith”)?
There are also different meanings of changeless and Aquinus derives his from the context of the argument from contingency and we are likely to draw ours from our Newtonian conceptions but devoid of Newton’s motivations.
Gibberish.
So anyway, is there any chance that you will finally try at least to address the arguments you’ve actually been given here that undo you? How about starting with your constant shifting of the burden of proof for example?