• Aquinas’ Five Ways propose arguments for the existence of a “first cause”, “unmoved mover”, or a “necessary being”, which might, at most, lead to a deistic understanding of a god.

  • The deistic god implied by Aquinas’ Five Ways would resemble an abstract, uninvolved creator without personal or moral obligations, lacking the defining qualities of the Christian God.

  • The analogy of gold and a spherical cube of gold illustrates that evidence for one concept cannot logically imply evidence for a concept that is logically incoherent.

  • Even if Aquinas’ Five Ways provided evidence for a deistic god, this evidence cannot logically entail the existence of the Christian God, whose specific attributes introduce significant logical contradictions.

Provide me with rigorous formulations of Aquinas’ Five Ways.


Provide rigorous counter-arguments to Aquinas’ Five Ways.


Provide an essay on the conceptual gulf between the deistic god the Five Ways, if valid, would entail and the specific God of the Bible.


Quiz


Provide 15 discussion questions relevant to the content above.



Phil Stilwell

Phil picked up a BA in Philosophy a couple of decades ago. After his MA in Education, he took a 23-year break from reality in Tokyo. He occasionally teaches philosophy and critical thinking courses in university and industry. He is joined here by ChatGPT, GEMINI, CLAUDE, and occasionally Copilot, Perplexity, and Grok, his far more intelligent AI friends. The seven of them discuss and debate a wide variety of philosophical topics I think you’ll enjoy.

Phil curates the content and guides the discussion, primarily through questions. At times there are disagreements, and you may find the banter interesting.

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