The way I see this term immanent cause, is not a cause of anything. God has transitive cause, maybe not necessarily to the cause of the entire universe, but certainly is the cause of our entire perception of reality.Sculptor wrote: ↑Tue May 16, 2023 2:58 pmI can't see how "transitive" can help in this context.attofishpi wrote: ↑Tue May 16, 2023 9:12 amYes and I understand that, but I am irked by the term "immanent cause".Sculptor wrote: ↑Tue May 16, 2023 9:01 am
God is not free. Everything that happens in the world is a necessary consequence of the nature of the universe itself.
He means that the universe is wholly deterministic. God does not reflect; does not desire; does not want; nor care.
Care is an emergent quality and is human, all too human.
I finally found today the research I had done on Spinoza (that was assisted with ChatGPT) before my PC "deterministically" got shagged in a bad way.
This term, an alternative to 'transitive cause' - an actual cause that makes sense to me doesn't make sense.
Is immanent cause a term used widely? There is no causality to it beyond humans applying definitions to things. (retro in time)![]()
unless...
So the idea would be that is a leads to b and b leads to c then it hold that c leads to a. I suppose we could conclude that it simplies a uniformitarianism.
Whilst "immanent" would imply ever present. The idea is that the world evolves according to constant change which, in some ways would also have to bu uniform.
That would make both compatible?
"Ethics" he states "God is the immanent cause of all things" - immanent cause causes nothing, I don't see it as a cause.
Of course I disagree here with Spinoza there.
Yes it's easy to find fault, contradictions with much of typical theist belief with their assumptions but certainly by his use of these assumptions I disagree that he has destroyed everything believed about God, I for one and from experience of this entity do not hold these assumptions.Sculptor wrote:His strategy is to pick on eveyday assumptions about god so as to unpack them, as either inconsistent to other ideas, or inherently meaningless.
Providence, vengeance, disappointment, and a rage of other characteristics attributed to god is incompatible with omnipotence omnicience and so forth.
Spinoza's geometic "proof" of god is characterised by unpacking and destorying everything beleived about god.
This for example which ends in the statement:- which is nowise in God, who is all goodness and
perfection. From experience this is another assumption, and indeed to look at the nature of life which he includes as God, it is obvious it is not ALL good.
Spinoza:-
either could not or would not give more ? The first i
[alternative] is not true, because it is impossible that a
substance should have wanted to make itself finite, especially
a substance which had come into existence through itself.
Therefore, I say, it is made finite by its cause, which is
necessarily God. Further, if it is finite through its cause,
this must be so either because its cause could not give
more, or because it would not give more. That he should
not have been able to give more would contradict his
omnipotence ; f that he should not have been willing 10
to give more, when he could well do so, savours of ill-
will, which is nowise in God, who is all goodness and
perfection.