It seems like what premise 2 and 3 are saying is that change exists only if "actuality" and "potentiality" exist, but this does not seem obvious at all; consider this alternative: change is the inherent nature of the universe and that for every event there is a temporally precedent event that is its cause.
In this alternative explanation of change, change needs no explanation outside of itself since the existence of change is due to it being the inherent nature of the universe. — Walter Pound
What is meant by #3 is that the existence of things are contingent, and that they are temporal, meaning that they have a beginning and ending in time.
6.) Things can only exist, however, if it has the potential to exist which is actualized. — darthbarracuda
If the universe is a "thing" then we conclude that it has a beginning in time
20.) But these are the characteristics of what we call God - therefore God exists. — darthbarracuda
15:02 Prof. Feser argues otherwise. — Walter Pound
2.) Material objects that change can only do so because they have potentials that have been actualized; — darthbarracuda
3.) A potential cannot be actualized except by something already actual. — darthbarracuda
What is ironic about this is that in a sense Feser, as a representative of the Roman Catholic orthodoxy, is less spiritual in regard to this example than is physics. The physical analysis, which is that 'everything depends on everything else' is essentially similar to the Mādhyamaka notion of Emptiness and Dependent Origination. — andrewk
Here is a debate between Prof. Ahmed and Prof. Feser over two different arguments for God. The first half of the debate goes over the argument of change; can anyone tell me what the definition of "actuality" and "potentiality" are? In the first half of the debate, time is spent trying to answer that question and it was still hard for me to grasp the definition. — Walter Pound
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