I personally can't agree with his argument, the fact that something had to come first does absolutely nothing in the way of proving God exists or was that which came first. I can agree that there must have been something at the beginning, without which nothing else could exist, but one can just as easily say that thing WAS the universe. Obviously nothing could exist within the universe without the universe to exist in. The assumption that the first cause must have been divine is simply the arrogant assertion of one's own belief that a God that can't be proven needs no proof but a universe which we all KNOW exists does.
Aquinas says that the universe can't be the First Cause because it could concievably not exist. The fact that he's even TRYING to prove God exists poses the possibility that he may not, and many people believe h does not. So the argument falls apart right there. I can imagine a universe without a God, but not the Christian concept of God without this universe, so it's definitely not the only possible cause of it.
I also can't fathom existence without the universe, because what we understand as existence is contained within our universe. I also can't fathom the universe appearing from nowehere, because scientific Law says matter can't be created, so I have no problem at all believing that the universe is the First Cause and was always here in some form. If I'm to accept that there is something that has always been there and requires no cause to be explained, I'm a Hell of a lot more likely to believe it's something I can actually prove exists than a God praised by a religion that's only been around for a couple thousand years.
I'm athiest.
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