Terrapin Station wrote:
Aquinas believed that God interacted with people--for example, he believed that God answered prayers. That wouldn't be possible under your views.
He believed that God answer all prayers in one eternal act. Creation to him is simply a block universe, all state of creation is known by God. The problem with block universe picture is that it is static. Each being is this picture experience the creation, decide and act, hence we can have a dynamic. The problem with this picture is that all beings must be synchronized to move accordingly otherwise to picture collapse.
Terrapin Station wrote:
I asked because you referred me to comments about God's relationship to time that do not seem to resemble yours at all.
I learned about his philosophy in a Catholic forum. I have never seriously read his works so I could be wrong in some places.
Terrapin Station wrote:
How could God perform the act of creation under your views? That's not changeless or motionless.
The act of existence of God and the act of creation lay at the same point in timeless state. I hope I am clear with what I stated. Please let me know.
Terrapin Station wrote:
(Personally, I think the the very idea of a changeless existent has problems, and at best, it could only be something hypothetical.)
God (if there is any) is either timeless or temporal. We have already discuss that the idea of temporal eternal (has no beginning and no end) God is impossible so we are left with timeless God which as we showed is problematic either. Hence there is no God.