Ponder This
Well-Known Member
What do you think of "the 5th Way" of Aquinas? Summary and explanation of the argument (from Wikipedia):
Summary
We see various objects that lack intelligence in the world behaving in regular ways. This cannot be due to chance since then they would not behave with predictable results. So their behavior must be set. But it cannot be set by themselves since they are non-intelligent and have no notion of how to set behavior. Therefore, their behavior must be set by something else, and by implication something that must be intelligent. This everyone understands to be God.
Explanation
This is also known as the Teleological Argument. However, it is not a "Cosmic Watchmaker" argument from design (see below). Instead, as the 1920 Dominican translation puts it, The fifth way is taken from the governance of the world.
The Fifth Way uses Aristotle's final cause. Aristotle argued that a complete explanation of an object will involve knowledge of how it came to be (efficient cause), what material it consists of (material cause), how that material is structured (formal cause), and the specific behaviors associated with the type of thing it is (final cause). The concept of final causes involves the concept of dispositions or "ends": a specific goal or aim towards which something strives. For example, acorns regularly develop into oak trees but never into sea lions. The oak tree is the "end" towards which the acorn "points," its disposition, even if it fails to achieve maturity. The aims and goals of intelligent beings is easily explained by the fact that they consciously set those goals for themselves. The implication is that if something has a goal or end towards which it strives, it is either because it is intelligent or because something intelligent is guiding it.
Five Ways (Aquinas) - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org
It's a tight argument.
Perhaps there's someway to dig into: What is intelligence?
Part of the idea seems to be that intelligence sets things in an ordered way, but intelligence is also capable of scrambling things.
For example, if I were to take a sentence and encrypt it, the point of the encryption is that the result does not have apparent regularity.
Or. let's say I want to go exploring, but I can choose to go in any direction... picking a direction at random.
If I were exploring space, then maybe I'd go over to the moon for a bit or loop around Mars and return to Earth or some other seemingly random path. Even supposing that my path is in some ways contrained by forces, my chosen path does not itself exhibit regularity... does it?