Medieval Proofs for the
Existence of God
Anselm of Canterbury and Thomas Aquinas / Translated by David
Burr
The following excerpts were taken from The
Internet Medieval Sourcebook , which is administrated by
Paul Halsall.
An Excerpt from the Proslogion of Anselm of Canterbury
Chapter 1: Encouraging the Mind to Contemplate God - Come
on now little man, get away from your worldly occupations for a
while, escape from your tumultuous thoughts. Lay aside your burdensome
cares and put off your laborious exertions. Give yourself over
to God for a little while, and rest for a while in Him. Enter into
the cell of your mind, shut out everything except God and whatever
helps you to seek Him once the door is shut. Speak now, my heart,
and say to God, "I seek your face; your face, Lord, I seek."
Come on then, my Lord God, teach my heart where and how to seek
you, where and how to find you. Lord, if you are not here, where
shall I find you? If, however, you are everywhere, why do I not
see you here? But certainly you dwell in inaccessible light. And
where is that inaccessible light? Or how do I reach it? Or who
will lead me to it and into it, so that I can see you in it? And
then by what signs, under what face shall I seek you? I have never
seen you, my Lord God, or known your face. What shall I do, Highest
Lord, what shall this exile do, banished far from you as he is?
What should your servant do, desperate as he is for your love yet
cast away from your face? He longs to see you, and yet your face
is too far away from him. He wants to come to you, and yet your
dwelling place is unreachable. He yearns to discover you, and he
does not know where you are. He craves to seek you, and does not
know how to recognize you. Lord, you are my Lord and my God, and
I have never seen you. You have made me and nurtured me, given
me every good thing I have ever received, and I still do not know
you. I was created for the purpose of seeing you, and I still have
not done the thing I was made to do.
Oh, how miserable man's lot is when he has lost what he was made
for! Oh how hard and dire was that downfall! Alas, what did he
lose and what did he find? What was taken away and what remains?
He has lost beatitude for which he was made, and he has found misery
for which he was not made. That without which he cannot be happy
has been taken away, and that remains which in itself can only
make him miserable. Back then man ate the bread of angels for which
he now hungers, and now he eats the bread of griefs which he did
not even know back then. Alas for the common grief of man, the
universal lamentation of Adam's sons! He belched in his satiety,
while we sigh in our want. He was rich, we are beggars. He happily
possessed and miserably abandoned, we unhappily lack and miserably
desire, yet alas, we remain empty. Why, since it would have been
easy for him, did he not keep what we so disastrously lack? Why
did he deprive us of light, and cover us with darkness instead?
Why did he take life away from us and inflict death instead? From
what have we poor wretches been expelled, and toward what are we
being driven? From what have we been cast down, in what buried?
From our fatherland into exile, from the vision of God into blindness.
From the happiness of immortality into the bitterness and horror
of death. What a miserable transformation! From so much good into
so much evil! A heavy injury, a heavy, heavy grief.
I have come to you as a poor man to a rich one, as a poor rich
to a merciful giver. May I not return empty and rejected! And if "I
sigh before I eat" ( Job 3:4 ), once
I have sighed give me something to eat. Lord, turned in (incurvatus)
as I am I can only look down, so raise me up so that I can look
up. "My iniquities heaped on my head" cover me over and weigh me
down "like a heavy load" (Ps. 37:5). Dig me out and set me free
before "the pit" created by them "shuts its jaws over me" (Ps.
67:16).Let me see your light, even if I see it from afar or from
the depths. Teach me to seek you, and reveal yourself to this seeker.
For I cannot seek you unless you teach me how, nor can I find you
unless you show yourself to me. Let me seek you in desiring you,
and desire you in seeking you. Let me find you in loving you and
love you in finding you.
I acknowledge, Lord, and I give thanks that you have created in
me this your image, so that I can remember you, think about you
and love you. But it is so worn away by sins, so smudged over by
the smoke of sins, that it cannot do what it was created to do
unless you renew and reform it. I do not even try, Lord, to rise
up to your heights, because my intellect does not measure up to
that task; but I do want to understand in some small measure your
truth, which my heart believes in and loved. Nor do I seek to understand
so that I can believe, but rather I believe so that I can understand.
For I believe this too, that "unless I believe I shall not understand" (Isa.
7:9).
Chapter 2: That God Really Exists - Therefore,
Lord, you who give knowledge of the faith, give me as much knowledge
as you know to be fitting for me, because you are as we believe
and that which we believe. And indeed we believe you are something
greater than which cannot be thought. Or is there no such kind
of thing, for "the fool said in his heart, 'there is no God'" (Ps.
13:1, 52:1)? But certainly that same fool, having heard what I
just said, "something greater than which cannot be thought," understands
what he heard, and what he understands is in his thought, even
if he does not think it exists. For it is one thing for something
to exist in a person's thought and quite another for the person
to think that thing exists. For when a painter thinks ahead to
what he will paint, he has that picture in his thought, but he
does not yet think it exists, because he has not done it yet. Once
he has painted it he has it in his thought and thinks it exists
because he has done it. Thus even the fool is compelled to grant
that something greater than which cannot be thought exists in thought,
because he understands what he hears, and whatever is understood
exists in thought. And certainly that greater than which cannot
be understood cannot exist only in thought, for if it exists only
in thought it could also be thought of as existing in reality as
well, which is greater. If, therefore, that than which greater
cannot be thought exists in thought alone, then that than which
greater cannot be thought turns out to be that than which something
greater actually can be thought, but that is obviously impossible.
Therefore something than which greater cannot be thought undoubtedly
exists both in thought and in reality.
Chapter 3: That God Cannot be Thought Not to Exist - In
fact, it so undoubtedly exists that it cannot be thought of as
not existing. For one can think there exists something that cannot
be thought of as not existing, and that would be greater than something
which can be thought of as not existing. For if that greater than
which cannot be thought can be thought of as not existing, then
that greater than which cannot be thought is not that greater than
which cannot be thought, which does not make sense. Thus that than
which nothing can be thought so undoubtedly exists that it cannot
even be thought of as not existing.
And you, Lord God, are this being. You exist so undoubtedly, my
Lord God, that you cannot even be thought of as not existing. And
deservedly, for if some mind could think of something greater than
you, that creature would rise above the creator and could pass
judgment on the creator, which is absurd. And indeed whatever exists
except you alone can be thought of as not existing. You alone of
all things most truly exists and thus enjoy existence to the fullest
degree of all things, because nothing else exists so undoubtedly,
and thus everything else enjoys being in a lesser degree. Why therefore
did the fool say in his heart "there is no God," since it is so
evident to any rational mind that you above all things exist? Why
indeed, except precisely because he is stupid and foolish?
Chapter 4: How the Fool Managed to Say in His Heart That
Which Cannot be Thought - How in the world could he
have said in his heart what he could not think? Or how indeed
could he not have thought what he said in his heart, since saying
it in his heart is the same as thinking it? But if he really
thought it because he said it in his heart, and did not say it
in his heart because he could not possibly have thought it -
and that seems to be precisely what happened - then there must
be more than one way in which something can be said in one's
heart or thought. For a thing is thought in one way when the
words signifying it are thought, and it is thought in quite another
way when the thing signified is understood. God can be thought
not to exist in the first way but not in the second. For no one
who understands what God is can think that he does not exist.
Even though he may say those words in his heart he will give
them some other meaning or no meaning at all. For God is that
greater than which cannot be thought. Whoever understands this
also understands that God exists in such a way that one cannot
even think of him as not existing.
Thank you, my good God, thank you, because what I believed earlier
through your gift I now understand through your illumination in
such a way that I would be unable not to understand it even if
I did not want to believe you existed.
Gaunilo: How Someone Writing on Behalf of the Fool
Might Reply to All This
To one who questions whether (or simply denies that) there exists
something of such a nature that nothing greater can be imagined,
it is said that its existence is proved in the first place by the
fact that anyone denying it already has it in his thought, since
upon hearing it said he understands what is said; and in the second
place by the fact that what he understands necessarily exists not
only in the mind but in reality as well. Thus its existence is
proved, because it is a greater thing to exist in reality as well
than to exist in the mind alone, and if it exists only in the mind,
then what exists in reality as well will be greater, and thus that
which is greater than all else will be less than something else
and not greater than all else, which is nonsense. Thus what is
greater than all else must necessarily exist, not only in the mind
(which has already been acknowledge to be the case), in reality
as well, or else it could not be greater than all else.
But perhaps the fool could reply that this thing is said to exist
in my mind only in the sense that I understand what is said. For
could I not say that all sorts of false and completely nonexistent
things exist in my mind since when someone speaks of them I understand
what is said? Unless perhaps what is being said here is that one
entertains this particular thing in the mind in a completely different
way than one thinks of false or doubtful things, and thus what
is being said is that having heard this particular thing I do not
merely think it but understand it, for I cannot think of this thing
in any other way except by understanding it, and that means understanding
with certainty that it actually exists. But if this is true, then
in the first place there will be no difference between first entertaining
that thing in the mind and then understanding that it exists. Imagine
the case of that picture which is first in the painter's mind,
then exists in reality. It seems unthinkable that, once such an
object was spoken of the words heard, the object could not be thought
not to exist in the same way God can be thought not to exist. For
if God cannot be thought not to exist, then what is the point of
launching this whole argument against someone who might deny that
something of such a nature actually exists? And in the second place,
this basic notion - that God is such that, as soon as he is thought
of, he must be perceived by the mind as unquestionably existing
- this notion, I say, must be proved to me by some unquestionable
argument, but not by the one offered here, namely that this must
be in my understanding because I understand what I'm hearing. For
as far as I am concerned one might say the same thing about other
things that are certain or even false, things about which I might
be deceived (as I believe I often am).
Thus the example of the painter who already has in his mind the
picture he is about to produce cannot be made to support this argument.
For that picture, before it comes into being, exists in the art
of the painter, and such a thing existing in the art of some painter
is nothing other than a certain part of his understanding; for
as Saint Augustine says, "If a craftsman is going to make a box,
he first has it in his art. The box he actually produces is not
life, but that in his art is life, because the artisan's soul,
in which all such things exist before they are brought forth, is
alive. And how are these things alive in the living soul of the
artisan unless because are nothing other than the knowledge or
understanding of the soul itself? But leaving aside those things
which are known to belong to the nature of the mind itself, in
the case of those things which are perceived as true by the mind
through hearing or thought, in this case there is a difference
between the thing itself and the mind which grasps it. Thus even
if it should be true that there is something greater than which
cannot be thought, this thing, whether heard or understood, would
not be like the as-yet-unmade picture in the painter's mind.
Moreover, there is the point already suggested earlier, namely
that when hear of something greater than all other things which
can be thought of - and that something can be nothing other than
God himself - I can no more entertain a thought of this being in
terms of species or genera familiar to me than I can entertain
such a thought of God himself, and for this reason I am able to
think he does not exist. For I have not known the thing itself
and I cannot form a similitude of it from other things. For if
I hear about some man completely unknown to me, whom I do not even
know exists, I could at least think about him through that specific
and generic knowledge by which I know what a man is or what men
are like Yet it could be true that, because the speaker was lying,
the man I thought about actually did not exist at all, even though
I had thought of him as an existing thing, my idea of him being
based, not on knowledge of this particular man, but on knowledge
of man in general. But when I hear someone say "God" or "something
greater than everything else" I cannot think of it as I thought
of that nonexistent man, for I was able to think of the latter
in terms of some truly existing thing known to me, while in the
former case I can think only of the bare words, and on this basis
alone one can seldom or never gain any true knowledge. For when
one thinks in this way, one thinks not so much of the word itself
- which, insofar as it is the sound of letters or syllables is
itself a real thing, but of what is signified by the sound heard.
But a phrase like "that which is greater than everything else" is
not thought of as one thinks about words when one knows what they
mean. It is not thought of, that is, as one thinks about something
he knows is true either in reality or in thought alone. It is thought
of, instead, as one does when he does not really know what the
words mean, but thinks of it only in terms of an affection produced
by the words within his soul, yet tries to imagine what the words
mean. On this basis, though, it would be amazing if he was ever
able to penetrate to the truth of the thing. It is in this way
and only in this way that this being is in my mind when I hear
and understand someone saying there is something greater than everything
else that can be thought of. So much for the claim that the supreme
nature already exists in my mind.
Nevertheless, that this being must exist not only in my mind but
in reality as well is proved to me by the following argument: If
it did not, then whatever did exist in reality would be greater,
and thus the thing which has already been proved to exist in my
mind will not be greater than everything else. If it is said that
this being, which cannot be conceived of in terms of any existing
thing, exists in the mind, I do not deny that it exists in mine.
But through this alone it can hardly be said to attain existence
in reality. I will not concede that much to it unless convinced
by some indubitable argument. For whoever says that it must exist
because otherwise that which is greater than all other beings will
not be greater than all other beings, that person isn't paying
careful enough attention to what he says. For I do not yet grant,
in fact I deny it or at least question it, that the thing existing
in my mind is greater than any real thing. Nor do I concede that
it exists in any way except this: the sort of existence (if you
can call it such) a thing has when the mind attempts to form some
image of a thing unknown to it on the basis of nothing more than
some words the person has heard. How then is it demonstrated to
me that the thing exists in reality merely because it is said to
be greater than everything else? For I continue to deny and doubt
that this is established, since I continue to question whether
this greater thing is in my mind or thought even in the way that
many doubtful or unreal things are. It would first have to be proved
to me that this greater thing really exists somewhere. Only then
will we be able to infer from the fact that is greater than everything
else that it also subsists in itself.
For example, they say there is in the ocean somewhere an island
which, due to the difficulty (or rather the impossibility) of finding
what does not actually exist, is called "the lost island." And
they say that this island has all manner of riches and delights,
even more of them than the Isles of the Blest, and having no owner
or inhabitant it is superior in the abundance of its riches to
all other lands which are inhabited by men. If someone should tell
me that such is the case, I will find it easy to understand what
he says, since there is nothing difficult about it. But suppose
he then adds, as if he were stating a logical consequence, "Well
then, you can no longer doubt that this island more excellent than
all other lands really exists somewhere, since you do not doubt
that it is in your mind; and since it is more excellent to exist
not only in the mind but in reality as well, this island must necessarily
exist, because if it didn't, any other island really existing would
be more excellent than it, and thus that island now thought of
by you as more excellent will not be such." If, I say, someone
tries to convince me though this argument that the island really
exists and there should be no more doubt about it, I will either
think he is joking or I will have a hard time deciding who is the
bigger fool, me if I believe him or him if he thinks he has proved
its existence without having first convinced me that this excellence
is something undoubtedly existing in reality and not just something
false or uncertain existing in my mind.
In the meantime, this is how the fool answers. If it is asserted
in the first place that this being is so great that its nonbeing
is logically inconceivable (this in turn being proved by nothing
except that otherwise it would not be greater than all other beings),
then the fool can answer, "When did I say that such a being, namely
one greater than all others, actually exists, thus allowing you
to proceed from there to argue that it so really exists that its
very nonexistence is inconceivable?" It should first be proved
conclusively that some being superior to (that is, greater and
better than) all others exists, so that on this basis we can go
on to prove the attributes such a greater and better being must
possess. When, however, it is said that this highest being cannot
be thought of as not existing, perhaps it would have been better
to say that its nonbeing or the possibility of its nonbeing is
unintelligible. For strictly speaking false things are unintelligible
even though they can be thought of in the same way the fool thought
God did not exist. I am absolutely certain that I exist, although
I nevertheless know that my nonexistence is possible. And I understand
without doubting it that the highest thing there is, namely God,
exists and cannot not exist. I do not know, however, whether I
can think of myself as nonexistant when I know for certain that
I exist. If it turns out that I can do so in this case, why should
I not be able to do the same concerning other things I know with
equal certainty? If I cannot, though, the impossibility of doing
so will not be something peculiar to thinking about God....
Anselm's Reply to Gaunilo
Since whoever wrote this reply to me is not the fool against whom
I wrote in my treatise but instead one who, though speaking on
behalf of the fool, is a catholic Christian and no fool himself,
I can speak to him as a catholic Christian.
You say - whoever you are who claim that the fool can say these
things - that something greater than which cannot be thought of
is in the mind only as something that cannot be thought of in terms
of some [existent thing known to us]. And you say that one can
no more argue, "since a being greater than which cannot be thought
of exists in my mind it must also exist in reality," than one can
argue, "the lost island certainly exists in reality because when
it is described in words the hearer has no doubt that it exists
in his mind." I say in reply that if "a being greater than which
cannot be thought of" is neither understood nor thought of, nor
is it in our understanding or our thought, then God either is not
that greater than which cannot be thought of or he is not understood
or thought of, nor is he in the understanding or mind. In proving
that this is false I appeal to your faith and conscience. Therefore "a
being greater than which cannot be thought of" is really understood
and thought of and it really is in our understanding and thought.
And that is why the arguments by which you attempt to prove the
contrary either are not true or what you think follows from them
does not follow from them at all.
Moreover, you imagine that although "a being greater than which
cannot be thought of" is understood, it does not follow that it
exists in our understanding nor does it follow that, since it is
in our understanding, it must exist in reality. I myself say with
certainty that if such a being can even be thought of as existing,
it must necessarily exist. For "a being greater than which cannot
be thought of" cannot be thought of except as having no beginning;
but whatever can be thought of as existing yet does not actually
exist can be thought of as having a beginning. Therefore "a being
greater than which cannot be thought of" cannot be thought of yet
not actually exist. Therefore, if it can be thought of, it necessarily
exists.
Furthermore, if it can be thought of at all, it must necessarily
exist. For no one who denies or doubts the existence of "a being
greater than which cannot be thought of" denies or doubts that,
if it did exist, it would be impossible for it not to exist either
in reality or in the mind. Otherwise it would not be "a being greater
than which cannot be thought of." But whatever can be thought of
yet does not actually exist, could, if it did come to exist, not
existence again in reality and in the mind. That is why, if it
can even be thought of, "a being greater than which cannot be thought
of" cannot be nonexistent.
But let us suppose that it does not exist (if it is even possible
to suppose as much). Whatever can be thought of yet does not exist,
even if it should come into existence, would not be "a being greater
than which cannot be thought of." Thus "a being greater than which
cannot be thought of" would not be "a being greater than which
cannot be thought of," which is absurd. Thus if "a being greater
than which cannot be thought of" can even be thought of, it is
false to say that it does not exist; and it is even more false
if such can be understood and exist in the understanding.
I will go even farther. Without doubt whatever does not exist
somewhere or at some time, even if it does exist somewhere or at
some time, can be thought of as capable of as existing never and
nowhere, just as it does not exist somewhere or at some time. For
what did not exist yesterday and exists today can be thought of
as never existing, just as it is thought of as not having existed
yesterday. And what does not exist here but does exist somewhere
else can be thought of as not existing anywhere. And it is the
same with something some parts of which are absent at times. If
that is the case, then all of its parts and thus the thing in its
entirety can be thought of as existing never and nowhere. For if
it is said that time always exists and the world is everywhere,
it is nevertheless true that time as a whole does not exist forever,
nor does the entire world exist everywhere. And if individual parts
of time exist when other parts do not, they can be thought of as
never existing at all. And just as particular parts of the world
do not exist where other parts do, so they can be thought of as
never existing at all, anywhere. And what is composed of parts
can be broken up in the mind and be nonexistent. Thus whatever
does not exist as a whole sometime or somewhere can be thought
of as not existing, even if it actually exists at the moment. But "a
being greater than which cannot be thought of," if it exists, cannot
be thought of as not existing. Otherwise it is not "a being greater
than which cannot be thought of," which is absurd. Thus it cannot
fail to exist in its totality always and everywhere.
Do you not believe that the being of which these things are understood
can be thought about or understood or be in the thought or understanding
to some extent? For if he is not, then we cannot understand these
things about him. If you say that he is not understood or in the
understanding because he is not fully understood, say as well that
one who cannot look directly at the sun does not see the light
of day, which is nothing other than the light of the sun. Certainly "a
being greater than which cannot be thought of" is understood and
exists in the understanding at least to the extent that these statements
about it are understood....
You often picture me as offering this argument: Because what is
greater than all other things exists in the understanding, it must
also exist in reality or else the being which is greater than all
others would not be such. Never in my entire treatise do I say
this. For there is a big difference between saying "greater than
all other things" and "a being greater than which cannot be thought
of." If someone says "a being greater than which cannot be thought
of" is not something actually existing or is something which could
possibly not exist or something which cannot even be understood,
such assertions are easily refuted. For what does not exist is
capable of not existing, and what is capable of not existing can
be thought of as not existing. But whatever can be thought of as
not existing, if it does actually exist, is not "a being greater
than which cannot be thought of...."
It is not, it seems, so easy to prove the same thing of "that
which is greater than all other things," for it is not all that
obvious that something which can be thought of as not existing
is not nevertheless greater than all things which actually exist.
Thomas Aquinas on God's Existence
Summa Theologica, Question I, 2
Article 1: Whether God's existence is self-evident.
[Objections] Thus we proceed to the first point. It seems that
God's existence is self-evident, for those things are said by us
to be self-evident the knowledge of which is naturally within us,
as is the case with first principles. But, as John of Damascus
says, "The knowledge of God's existence is naturally implanted
in all things." Therefore God's existence is self-evident.
Furthermore, those things are said to be self-evident the truth
of which is obvious once the meaning of the words is clear. For
example, when we understand the means of the words "whole" and "part," we
immediately realize that every whole is greater than its part.
Once we understand the meaning of the word "God," however, it immediately
follows that God exists. The words itself signifies "that being
a greater than which cannot be signified." That which exists in
fact and in the mind is greater than that which exists in the mind
alone. Thus, since the moment we understand the meaning of the
word "God" he exists in our minds, it follows that he must also
exist in fact. Thus God's existence is self- evident.
Furthermore, it is self-evident that truth exists, for whoever
denies the existence of truth simultaneously concedes its existence.
If truth does not exist, then it is true that truth does not exist;
yet if something is true, then truth exists. God, however, is truth
itself. "I am the way, the truth and the life" (Jn. 14:6). Therefore
God's existence is self-evident.
But on the contrary, no one can think the opposite of what is
self-evident, as Aristotle remarks. One can, however, think the
opposite of the proposition "God exists," for, as the Psalm says, "The
fool says in his heart, 'there is no God." (Ps. 13:1, 52:1). Thus
it is not self-evident that God exists.
Response: It must be said that a thing can be called "self-evident" in
two- ways, in itself and in relation to us. A proposition is self-evident
when its predicate is included in the definition of its subject.
For example, in the proposition "man is an animal," the idea of "animal" is
included in the definition of "man." Thus if everyone knows the
definitions of both subject and predicate, the proposition will
be self-evident to all, as is the case with the first principles
of demonstration, the terms of which are so common that no one
is ignorant of them, such as "being" and "nonbeing," "whole" and "part," etc.
If, the proposition may be self-evident in itself, but not to them.
Thus it happens, as Boethius says, that some things are common
conceptions of the mind" and are self-evident "among the learned
only, such as that incorporeal beings do not occupy a place."
I say, therefore, that this proposition, "God exists," is self-evident
in itself, since the predicate is the same as the subject. For
God is his own existence, as will be seen later. Nevertheless,
because we do not know what is involved in being God, the proposition
is not self-evident to us, but needs to be demonstrated through
those things that are more evident to us though less evident to
themselves, namely God's effects.
[Replies] To the first argument, therefore, it must be said that
a general and confused knowledge of God's existence is naturally
infused within us, for God is man's beatitude and man naturally
desires beatitude. What man naturally desires he naturally knows.
This is not to know God's existence specifically, however. It is
one thing to know that someone is approaching and quite another
to know that Peter is approaching, even though that someone may
actually be Peter. Many people think that the perfect good of man
called "beatitude" is wealth, some imagine it to be pleasure, and
so on.
To the second argument it must be said that he who hears the name "God" may
perhaps not know that it signifies "something greater than which
cannot be conceived," since some people have thought of God as
a body. Granting, however, that someone should think of God in
this way, namely as "that being a greater than which cannot be
conceived, "it does not follow on this account that the person
must understand what is signified to exist in the world of fact,
but only in the mind. Nor can one argue that it exists in fact
unless one grants that there actually exists in fact something
a greater than which cannot be conceived. It is, however, precisely
this assertion the atheist denies.
To the third, it must be said that the existence of truth in general
is self- evident to us, but it is not self-evident that this particular
being is the primal truth.
Article 2: Whether God's existence is demonstrable.
[Objections] We proceed thus to the second point. It seems that
God's existence is not demonstrable, for it is an article of faith.
What is a matter of faith cannot be demonstrable, for demonstration
allows one to know, whereas faith, as Paul says, is in "things
not seen" (Heb. 11:1). Therefore God's existence is not demonstrable.
Furthermore, the central link in any demonstration is a definition;
yet we cannot know what God is, but only what he is not, as John
of Damascus says. Therefore we cannot demonstrate God's existence.
Furthermore, if God's existence were demonstrable, this could
only be through his effects; yet his effects are not proportionate
to him, for he is infinite, his effects are infinite, and there
is no proportion between the two. Therefore, since a cause cannot
be demonstrated through an effect which is not proportioned to
it, it seems that God's existence cannot be demonstrated.
But on the contrary Paul says, "The invisible things of God are
understood by the things that are made" ( Romans
1:20 ). Such could not be the case unless God's existence could
be demonstrated by the things that are made, for the first thing
to be understood about a thing is whether it exists.
Response: It must be said that there are two types of demonstration.
One is through the cause, is called a demonstration propter quid,
and argues from what is prior in an absolute sense. The other is
through the effect, is called a demonstration quia, and argues
from what is prior according to our perspectives; for when an effect
is better known to us than its cause, we proceed from the effect
to knowledge of the cause. In situations where the effect is better
know to us than the cause, the existence of the cause can be demonstrated
form that of the effect, since the effect depends on the cause
and can only exist if the cause already does so. Thus God's existence,
though not self-evident to us, can be demonstrated through his
effects.
[Replies] To the first argument, therefore, it must be said that
God's existence and other things about him which (as Paul says)
can be known by natural reason are not articles of faith but preambles
to the articles of faith. For faith presupposes natural knowledge
just as grace presupposes nature and perfection presupposes something
which can be perfected. Nothing prohibits what is demonstrable
and knowable in itself from being accepted on faith by someone
who does not understand the demonstration.
To the second it must be said that, when a cause is demonstrated
through its effect, the effect substitutes for the definition of
the cause within the demonstration. This is particularly true in
arguments concerning God. When we prove that something exists,
the middle term in the demonstration is what we are taking the
word to mean for purposes of the demonstration, not what the thing
signified by the word actually is (since the latter, the actual
nature of the thing in question, is determined only after we determine
that it exists). In demonstrating that God exists, we can take
as our middle term definition of what this word "God" means for
us, for, as we shall see, the words we use in connection with God
are derived from his effects.
To the third, it must be said that perfect knowledge of a cause
cannot be derived from an effect that is not proportionate to the
cause. Nevertheless, the existence of the cause can be demonstrated
clearly from the existence of the effects, even though we cannot
know the cause perfectly according to its essence.
Article 3: Whether God exists.
[Objections] Thus we proceed to the third point. It seems that
God does not exist, for if one of two contrary things were infinite,
its opposite would be completely destroyed. By "God," however,
we mean some infinite good. Therefore, if God existed evil would
not. Evil does exist in the world, however. Therefore God does
not exist.
Furthermore, one should not needlessly multiply elements in an
explanation. It seems that we can account for everything we see
in this world on the assumption that God does not exist. All natural
effects can be traced to natural causes, and all contrived effects
can be traced to human reason and will. Thus there is no need to
suppose that God exists.
But on the contrary God says, "I am who I am" ( Ex.
3:14 ).
Response: It must be said that God's existence can be proved in
five ways. The first and most obvious way is based on the existence
of motion. It is certain and in fact evident to our senses that
some things in the world are moved. Everything that is moved, however,
is moved by something else, for a thing cannot be moved unless
that movement is potentially within it. A thing moves something
else insofar as it actually exists, for to move something is simply
to actualize what is potentially within that thing. Something can
be led thus from potentiality to actuality only by something else
which is already actualized. For example, a fire, which is actually
hot, causes the change or motion whereby wood, which is potentially
hot, becomes actually hot. Now it is impossible that something
should be potentially and actually the same thing at the same time,
although it could be potentially and actually different things.
For example, what is actually hot cannot at the same moment be
actually cold, although it can be actually hot and potentially
cold. Therefore it is impossible that a thing could move itself,
for that would involve simultaneously moving and being moved in
the same respect. Thus whatever is moved must be moved by something,
else, etc. This cannot go on to infinity, however, for if it did
there would be no first mover and consequently no other movers,
because these other movers are such only insofar as they are moved
by a first mover. For example, a stick moves only because it is
moved by the hand. Thus it is necessary to proceed back to some
prime mover which is moved by nothing else, and this is what everyone
means by "God."
The second way is based on the existence of efficient causality.
We see in the world around us that there is an order of efficient
causes. Nor is it ever found (in fact it is impossible) that something
is its own efficient cause. If it were, it would be prior to itself,
which is impossible. Nevertheless, the order of efficient causes
cannot proceed to infinity, for in any such order the first is
cause of the middle (whether one or many) and the middle of the
last. Without the cause, the effect does not follow. Thus, if the
first cause did not exist, neither would the middle and last causes
in the sequence. If, however, there were an infinite regression
of efficient causes, there would be no first efficient cause and
therefore no middle causes or final effects, which is obviously
not the case. Thus it is necessary to posit some first efficient
cause, which everyone calls "God."
The third way is based on possibility and necessity. We find that
some things can either exist or not exist, for we find them springing
up and then disappearing, thus sometimes existing and sometimes
not. It is impossible, however, that everything should be such,
for what can possibly not exist does not do so at some time. If
it is possible for every particular thing not to exist, there must
have been a time when nothing at all existed. If this were true,
however, then nothing would exist now, for something that does
not exist can begin to do so only through something that already
exists. If, therefore, there had been a time when nothing existed,
then nothing could ever have begun to exist, and thus there would
be nothing now, which is clearly false. Therefore all beings cannot
be merely possible. There must be one being which is necessary.
Any necessary being, however, either has or does not have something
else as the cause of its necessity. If the former, then there cannot
be an infinite series of such causes, any more than there can be
an infinite series of efficient causes, as we have seen. Thus we
must to posit the existence of something which is necessary and
owes its necessity to no cause outside itself. That is what everyone
calls "God."
The fourth way is based on the gradations found in things. We
find that things are more or less good, true, noble, etc.; yet
when we apply terms like "more" and "less" to things we imply that
they are closer to or farther from some maximum. For example, a
thing is said to be hotter than something else because it comes
closer to that which is hottest. Therefore something exists which
is truest, greatest, noblest, and consequently most fully in being;
for, as Aristotle says, the truest things are most fully in being.
That which is considered greatest in any genus is the cause of
everything is that genus, just as fire, the hottest thing, is the
cause of all hot things, as Aristotle says. Thus there is something
which is the cause of being, goodness, and every other perfection
in all things, and we call that something "God."
The fifth way is based on the governance of things. We see that
some things lacking cognition, such as natural bodies, work toward
an end, as is seen from the fact hat they always (or at least usually)
act the same way and not accidentally, but by design. Things without
knowledge tend toward a goal, however, only if they are guided
in that direction by some knowing, understanding being, as is the
case with an arrow and archer. Therefore, there is some intelligent
being by whom all natural things are ordered to their end, and
we call this being "God."
[Replies] To the first argument, therefore, it must be said that,
as Augustine remarks, "since God is the supreme good he would permit
no evil in his works unless he were so omnipotent and good that
he could produce good even out of evil."
To the second, it must be said that, since nature works according
to a determined end through the direction of some superior agent,
whatever is done by nature must be traced back to God as its first
cause. in the same way, those things which are done intentionally
must be traced back to a higher cause which is neither reason nor
human will, for these can change and cease to exist and, as we
have seen, all such things must be traced back to some first principle
which is unchangeable and necessary, as has been shown. |