I would prefer to call your "efficient cause" the "agent" (Panini's Kartaa). The "instrumental cause" corresponds to his Karana. The "clay" can play an instrumental role in a sentence, as in "The potter (agent) fashioned the pot with clay" as opposed to "The potter made the pot with a potter's wheel". The interesting thing that Panini discovered in such sentences is that "potter's wheel" and "clay" could not be expressed as instrument in the same sentence, so one of the two gets demoted to adhikarana (source), as in "The potter made the pot out of clay with the potter's wheel"--not **"The potter made the pot with clay with the potter's wheel." A very subtle linguistic observation. I actually wrote my Ph.D. dissertation on this subject.
Fantastic. I also have great respect for Panini and his Sanskrit grammar. His work is truly superlative, but as I am not a linguist, I cannot really appreciate the depth of it. Yes, the Nyaya argument that three entities are required for creation: material cause(source), efficient cause(creator/agent) and instrumental cause is inspired by Panini's grammar.
So, right here is the "turtles all the way down" problem. The universe is full of "created" agents (or "efficient causes")--that is, human beings, animals, etc. So we actually have no examples of uncreated agents to work with. The unwarranted leap here is the assumption of a creator that is itself uncreated. The argument does not address this asymmetrical view of agents--that there exists an uncreated one.
There is a very brilliant refutation of this argument in Samkhya philosophy and that is that there is no created agent. If we observe the created world carefully we will find that the things that are existent are all of a material nature. They have a distinct property of arising and falling. The seasons in nature, trees, plants, animals and human are all matter that comes into being, exists for a while, and then decomposes back to matter. This also includes mental things like the arising and falling of thoughts, emotions, perceptions. However, there is one thing that does not rise and fall and that is the observer itself. The observer remains constant between all events. I am the common witness that observes the changing seasons, the changing events in society, my body changing, my personality changing, mental states changing. Thus the observer itself is not reducible to matter. It does not have the property of change. Rather, it is has the property of substance, continuity.
If we reduce matter to its ultimate state then matter is completely potential and in a superpositioned state. There is no cause within matter to collapse that potential state because that cause itself would be superpositioned. This uniform and unmanifest state that demands an initial movement to collapse it, and this can only be provided by an efficient cause which itself is outside of matter.
That's very interesting. There were precursors to Darwin's "natural selection" in the Western tradition, as well. So it is not surprising that the Indian tradition would have developed that thread, too. Most European schools of philosophy had parallels in Indian history, although the Hindus had far more advanced linguistic theories than their European contemporaries.
Yes, Hindu had advanced theories in all areas of sciences. Please check out my post in the thread in the Hinduism forum, "Does Hinduism have scientific proof" where I discuss some of those theories in a wide field of sciences(grammar, psychology, medicine, physics, metaphysics)
This is where chaos theory comes in. Ordered self-replicating processes seem to emerge naturally out of chaos. An agent (or "efficient cause") would just be a very complex emergent phenomenon that arises through chaotic interactions. As with a theistic explanation, there is something that always existed, it just wasn't God. It was what you have been calling the "material cause". Instrumental and "efficient" causes would always be derivatives of material causes. There are lots of caused things in nature that were not created by any apparent "efficient cause".
Chaos theory is very problematic, especially to Hindus. In Hinduism the notion that anything could arise/emerge from nothing is the most illogical and absurd thing imaginable. One of the doctrine of Hinduism is the law of karma, cause and effect. If there is an effect, there is absolutely a cause. This is to be observed clearly in nature that nothing issues randomly from anything. Everything has a cause. The arrow does not lead the bow without the bowman providing the momentum energy. The barren woman does not conceive.
But still it appears that new properties are emerging in nature all the time. This is the position that Nyaya-Vaiseshika(realists) took. That the effect is different from the cause. If two particles interact the compound that forms has different properties to the parent particles. However, is that really true, or only appears to be true? In actuality what appear to be different properties are just the same atoms consisting of different permutations of protons, electrons and neutrons. All of matter is just these
really. Now Samkhya takes this reduction even further and shows that everything really is vibrations of the gunas within quantum matter. It is observed that if you take the chain of cause and effect in the world of all produced things you eventually come to an ultimate cause. This ultimate cause is purely potential and not yet manifest.
The tree comes out of the seed. The seed does not contain a tree, but the tree is potential within the seed. Then when the tree begins to manifest it starts out as in a very subtle form(to the observer the tree is invisible) and then it starts to sprout getting even more massive. Note the sequence of manifestation: potential, subtle then massive. Similarly, all matter begins as potential, then it is subtle, and then it is massive. Matter never begins as massive.
Always it is the case that the potential state where all potential things are superpositioned requires an external efficient cause to collapse it. The seed will not grow until it is watered and it has suitable soil and climate. These are external efficient causes. The seed cannot just start growing by itself. Similarly, matter cannot just begin evolving by itself. It requires an efficient cause to start the process.
This is where you are wrong. Clays actually do form self-replicating processes, just not pots. Pots are formed by an interaction between "created" humans and clay. Where did the humans come from? Other material causes. Agentive causes are always derivative of simpler material interactions.
Imagine I put a lump of clay in front of you. See if it does anything. Day 1. Day 2. Day 3. Day 4...... Day 1000. Did it aggregate into anything? No the lump of clay remained put and nothing happen. It is only when you apply an external cause that something happens to the clay.
Let us try another thought experiment. There is a mountain. This mountain experiences over a course of 1000 years erosion, bombardment which changes its shape and form. Will that shape and form ever become a fully shaped Buddha sculpture? No, the moutain shape and form will change, but it will require an efficient cause to shape it into an intelligent design.
You are right the clay will experience some changes to its form(natural erosion over time and natural accidents) but never ever will it turn into a pot unless there is a potter with a potters wheel.
Similarly matter can never form any kind of intelligent design without there being an intelligence. It will form only chaos and nothing else.
Another example given often by chaos theory proponents is 1 million monkeys typing away at their typewriter for billions of years eventually one of those moneys will produce the complete works of Shakespeare by chance. This is absolutely unfounded. I once tried this experiment myself I sat before my keyboard on my computer and started randomy typing like a monkey would for a long time, I got nothing but chaos. I have no reason to believe the result would be any different if I did this over 1 billion years. I would never end up with the complete works Shakespeare because it is an intelligent design.
Random aggregation will never produce an intelligent design, because it will aggregate, then disaggregate and cancel itself out. Designing a system requires awareness, organization, planning and this is only possible by a self-aware intelligent being.
How could you possibly know this? And what do you mean by "stability"? Are you saying that there is no stability in emergent phenomena that arise out of chaotic deterministic systems? We can model and observe that stability in chaotic interactions. Are you familiar with the
game of life?
Matter is not stable anyway. We know that at the quantum level it is just a complete chaos of vibrations. It is constant activity. There is no substance. Therefore, what is it that intuits substance on matter? The answer is in Hinduism - the observer. The notion of substance exists only in the observer. It an a priori that gets imposed on the world of flux to give it shape and form. Otherwise, it is well known today that matter is not solid.