St Thomas Aquinas relied on what is known as the Cosmological Argument for the existence of God. He claimed that there were five valid ways to prove God exists, although thre of them are essentially restatements of the same things. Essentially his view was that some contingent beings exist; contingent beings require a noncontingent ground of being (a "necessary thing") in order to exist; therefore a noncontingent ground of being exists. This is not a great deal different to the Ontological Argument.
Aquinas' theological positions involved making unprovable assumptions from which to prove the unprovable.
One common contradiction to St. Thomas Aquinas' five ways is the argument of the Problem of Evil. This argument asserts that the existence of evil and suffering in the world is inconsistent with the idea of an all-powerful, all-loving God. The Problem of Evil raises questions about the nature of God's attributes and challenges the logic of Aquinas' proofs for the existence of God.
Some philosophers who have presented proofs for the existence of God include St. Thomas Aquinas (via the Five Ways), René Descartes (via his ontological argument), and G.W. Leibniz (via the cosmological argument). These proofs vary in their premises and reasoning, but each aims to demonstrate the existence of a higher being through logical deduction.
Rationality & religion don't mix.
Nothing Sacred - 1997 Proofs for the Existence of God 1-1 was released on: USA: 18 September 1997
Thomas Aquinas responded to Anselm's argument for the existence of God by developing his own philosophical framework known as the Five Ways. Aquinas argued that the existence of God can be proven through reason and observation of the natural world, rather than relying solely on faith or abstract reasoning.
St. Thomas Aquinas' work was the culmination of work beginning with Plato. Using Aristotelean logic, he created the five "proofs of God" and expounded on those proofs to explain the whole of Christian Theology, in seven volumes called the Summa Theologia, often abbreviated to the Summa.
God can't be seen, measured, weighed, smelled, felt or in any way sampled. All proofs of God's existence are either hearsay, or inferred proofs as in "this world has to have been made by someone"
Yes, no-one has found any proof that god exists. Not one scrap of evidence.
The five ways of reason are the arguments of motion, causes, possibility, degress of perfection, and governance. These arguments were made by St. Thomas Aquanis which proposed that the existence of God can be demonstrated through reason.
Absolutely! He developed some resounding proofs of God's existence that were used often in Western Philosophy
yes the god Krishna realy exist.. http://www.iskcondesiretree.net/forum/topics/dwaraka-a-lost-city-recovered
here be me thomas aquinas own argument to say that god is real i can prove bye the holy spirit