Composed beings are made up of parts.
2. A composed being exists contingently upon its parts in their specific arrangement.
3. A part of a composed being is either composed or uncomposed.
4. A part that is a composed being does not, in turn, exist in-itself but, rather, exists contingently upon its parts and their specific arrangement.
5. An infinite series of composed beings for any given composed being (viz., a composed being of which its parts are also, in turn, composed and so on ad infinitum) would not have the power to exist on their own.
6. Therefore, an infinite series of composed beings is impossible.
7. Therefore, a series of composed beings must have, ultimately, uncomposed parts as its first cause. (6 & 3)
8. An uncomposed being (such as an uncomposed part) is purely simple, since it lacks any parts.
9. Two beings can only exist separately if they are distinguishable in their parts.
10. Two purely simple beings do not have any different parts (since they have none).
11. Therefore, only one purely simple being can exist.
12. The purely simple being would have to be purely actual—devoid of any passive potency—because passive potency requires a being to have parts which can be affected by an other.
13. No composed being could be purely actual, because a composed being always has parts which, as parts, must have passive potency.
14. Therefore, there can only be one purely actual being which is also purely simple. (11 & 12 & 13)
15. The purely actual being is changeless (immutable), because it lacks any passive potency which could be actualized.
16. The purely actual being is eternal, because it is changeless and beyond time (as time’s subsistence of existence).
17. The effect must be some way in the cause.
18. The physical parts of a composed being cannot exist in something which is purely simple and actual; for, then, it would not be without parts.
19. Therefore, the forms of the composed beings must exist in the purely simple and actual being.
20. Intelligence is having the ability to apprehend the form of things (and not its copies!).
21. The purely simple and actual being apprehends the forms of things. (19)
22. Therefore, the purely simple and actual being must be an intelligence.
23. To know the forms of every composed being is what it means to be omniscient.
24. Therefore, the purely simple and actual being is omniscient.
25. To cause the existence of a thing in correspondence to its form from knowledge (intelligence) requires a will.
26. Therefore, the purely simple and actual being must have a will.
27. To be good is to lack any privation of what the thing is.
28. The purely simple and actual being cannot have any privations, since it is fully actual.
29. Therefore, the purely simple and actual being is all-good.
30. To will the good of another independently of one’s own good is love.
31. The purely simple and actual being wills the good of all composed beings by willing their existence.
32. Therefore, the purely simple and actual being is all-loving.
33. Power is the ability to actualize potentials.
34. The purely simple and actual being is the ultimate cause of all actualization of potentials.
35. Therefore, the purely simple and actual being is omnipotent.
36. The existence of all composed things subsists through this purely simple and actual being.
37. Therefore, the purely simple and actual being is omnipresent.
38. A being which is absolutely simple, absolutely actual, eternal, immutable, all-loving, omniscient, omnipresent, omnipotent, all-good, one, unique, and necessary just is God.
39. Therefore, the purely simple and actual being is God.
40. The world we live in is made up of composed beings.
41. The composed beings must subsist through an absolutely simple and actual being.
42. Therefore, God exists. — Bob Ross
1) Composed beings are made up of parts."
No. They are the parts as whole
2. A composed being exists contingently upon its parts in their specific arrangement."
It doesn't rely on its parts, is IS all the parts as whole. You can think of a composite thing as a number with it's parts fractions. The sum is a convergence
3. A part of a composed being is either composed or uncomposed."
Of course, but this doesn't follow from 1) and 2)
4. A part that is a composed being does not, in turn, exist in-itself but, rather, exists contingently upon its parts and their specific arrangement."
False. It is not separable like that from it parts
5. An infinite series of composed beings for any given composed being (viz., a composed being of which its parts are also, in turn, composed and so on ad infinitum) would not have the power to exist on their own."
Zeno?
6. Therefore, an infinite series of composed beings is impossible.
Then show me something discrete
7. Therefore, a series of composed beings must have, ultimately, uncomposed parts as its first cause. (6 & 3)
So it must BE God?
8. An uncomposed being (such as an uncomposed part) is purely simple, since it lacks any parts."
And is nothing
9. Two beings can only exist separately if they are distinguishable in their parts."
False. They can be diiferent in identity. Why are you invoking Leibniz?
10. Two purely simple beings do not have any different parts (since they have none)."
Ok
11. Therefore, only one purely simple being can exist."
False. See 9)
12. The purely simple being would have to be purely actual—devoid of any passive potency—because passive potency requires a being to have parts which can be affected by an other.
Why is God death the answer to divisibility?
13. No composed being could be purely actual, because a composed being always has parts which, as parts, must have passive potency.
Existence needs potency in order to be. Hence there can be incarnations?
18. The physical parts of a composed being cannot exist in something which is purely simple and actual; for, then, it would not be without parts."
What do you mean by "in". This one is dubious
19. Therefore, the forms of the composed beings must exist in the purely simple and actual being."
Form and matter are the same thing seen from different angles
20. Intelligence is having the ability to apprehend the form of things (and not its copies!).
21. The purely simple and actual being apprehends the forms of things. (19)
22. Therefore, the purely simple and actual being must be an intelligence.
Who says he knows human qualia?
23. To know the forms of every composed being is what it means to be omniscient.'
Only if the world is infinite
24. Therefore, the purely simple and actual being is omniscient."
False
25. To cause the existence of a thing in correspondence to its form from knowledge (intelligence) requires a will."
True but what if there are infinite wills?
28. The purely simple and actual being cannot have any privations, since it is fully actual."
No because before you tried to say God was simple because he is empty. Now your trying to sneak in the full part. Typical Thomism
29. Therefore, the purely simple and actual being is all-good.
30. To will the good of another independently of one’s own good is love.
31. The purely simple and actual being wills the good of all composed beings by willing their existence."
Maybe he is only kind of good
34. The purely simple and actual being is the ultimate cause of all actualization of potentials.
But deism
42. Therefore, God exists."
False. Thomism is inferior philosophy