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Full Idea
If the prime origin is destroyed, it will not come into being again out of anything.
Gist of Idea
If the prime origin is destroyed, it will not come into being again out of anything
Source
Plato (Phaedrus [c.366 BCE], 245d)
Book Ref
Plato: 'Phaedrus and Letters VII and VIII', ed/tr. Hamilton,Walter [Penguin 1973], p.49
A Reaction
This is the essence of Aquinas's Third Way of proving God's existence.
273 | Movement is transmitted through everything, and it must have started with self-generated motion [Plato] |
148 | If the prime origin is destroyed, it will not come into being again out of anything [Plato] |
308 | If the cosmos is an object of perception then it must be continually changing [Plato] |
1498 | Everyone agrees that the world had a beginning, but thinkers disagree over whether it will end [Aristotle] |
613 | Even if the world is caused by fate, mind and nature are still prior causes [Aristotle] |
619 | Something which both moves and is moved is intermediate, so it follows that there must be an unmoved mover [Aristotle] |
620 | The first mover is necessary, and because it is necessary it is good [Aristotle] |
5977 | Heaven and earth must be created, because they are subject to change [Augustine] |
21108 | The universe is precisely 13.72 billion years old [Krauss] |
16581 | Scholastic authors agree that matter was created by God, out of nothing [Pasnau] |