| Introduction to Philosophy | Notes | This is not a substitute for coming to class - or for reading the material. | Richard Lee |
| Philosophy 2003 | Copyright © 2007, Richard Lee | Spring 2007 | |
Proof by reductio ad absurdum
Assume there is no first cause.
"But if we remove a cause the effect is removed." (Aquinas IP3 168a)
So, if there is no first cause, there is no second cause, and no third cause . . . and thus no causes at all!
But there are causes (i.e. something things are causing other things).
But this is a contradiction ("There are causes but there are no causes").
So, by reductio, the assumption is false.
I.e., There is a first cause.
If there is a first cause, then that first cause is God. [linking claim]
Therefore, God exists.