ROB KOONS
  • Home
  • Published articles
  • Work in Progress
  • Lectures
  • Contact and Links
  • Old Blog (2021-22)

The Rigorous Thomist

A Blog by Rob Koons

The Upshot of the Fourth Way

6/22/2021

0 Comments

 
The heart of the Fourth Way, as I interpret it, is a simple argument:

  1. In every possible world, God is the cause of the actual existence of all other actually existent things. (From the Second and Third Ways).
  2. The cause of something's existence must be at least as noble, true, and good as the thing itself. (Aristotle's principle from Metaphysics 2)
  3. Therefore, God is a noble, true, and good as anything could possibly be.
 
Why think that the Aristotelian principle is true? And what does it mean for something to be truer, nobler, better, or “more existent” than another? We have already seen an appeal to the proportionality of causes in the First and Second Ways. A cause must “have” what it “gives” in some way, either “formally” (by literally have the same characteristic) or “eminently”. Applying this to existence, we could say that the cause of the existence of x must exist either in the same way as x or in a “higher” way.
 
What do “higher”, “nobler” or “better” mean in this context? They must refer to a real, objective hierarchy, not just to our subjective preferences or interest. They must mean something like: having a wider array of powers and capabilities. As Kenny suggests, this corresponds to something like having a more powerful set of cognitive capacities. Despite what Kenny says, St. Thomas’s argument does not depend on everything’s lying on a strictly linear order. It’s okay if some pairs of things are not comparable in their degree of being, so long as there are some things that are strictly nobler than everything else (a common peak in the “Mountain of Being”).
 
I should say something briefly about Aristotle and Aquinas’s notion that some beings are “truer” than others. As Aquinas explains, “true” can be used in two ways: to refer to a cognition that corresponds to some reality, and to a reality that corresponds to some cognition. My idea of a triangle is true if it accurately represents triangles. A triangle is “true” (as a triangle) if it accurately corresponds to the definition of triangle. What would it be for a thing to be “truer” than another thing (as an existing thing)? It might be that it corresponds more accurately to the full, unqualified concept of Being as such. If so, the more nearly perfect or the nobler a thing is, the truer it is.
0 Comments



Leave a Reply.

    Author

    Rob Koons, a professor of philosophy, trained in the analytic tradition at Oxford and UCLA. Specializing in the further development of the Aristotle-Aquinas tradition in metaphysics and the philosophy of nature.

    Archives

    August 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021

    Categories

    All
    Acts Of Existence
    Actualism
    Actuality
    Agency
    Being
    Causal Finitism
    Causation
    Change
    Classical Theism
    Contingency
    Design
    Divine Freedom
    Divine Simplicity
    Efficient Causation
    Essence
    Eternity
    Ethics
    Evil
    Existence
    Fifth Way
    First Cause
    First Mover
    First Way
    Five Ways
    Fourth Way
    Free Will
    God's Existence
    Goodness
    Grace
    Grim Reaper
    Haecceity
    Immateriality
    Infinite Regress
    Infinity
    Instrumental Causation
    Intelligence
    Joe Schmid
    Justice
    Kalam Argument
    Knowledge
    Love
    Matter
    Maximum Being
    Metaethics
    Modal Collapse
    Modality
    Motion
    Necessary Being
    Parts/Wholes
    Passions
    Passive Potentiality
    Patchwork Principle
    Perfection
    Persistence
    Platonism
    Potentiality
    Powers
    Predestination
    Prime Matter
    Providence
    Pure Actuality
    Real Distinction
    Relativity
    Scotism
    Second Way
    Sin
    Substantial Change
    Teleology
    Third Way
    Time
    Unity Of God
    Virtue
    Will Of God

    RSS Feed

Site powered by Weebly. Managed by Bluehost
  • Home
  • Published articles
  • Work in Progress
  • Lectures
  • Contact and Links
  • Old Blog (2021-22)