The Finiteness of the Chain of Causality
The materialists may insist obstinately on denying the truth and put
forward another specious argument. They may say, "We do not cut off the
chain of causality but, on the contrary, perpetuate it indefinitely; we
defend the principle of the infinite nature of the causative link."
In that case, they should be answered as follows: To analyze the world
of creation in this manner rests on the supposition of a chain of causes
and effects and the infinite unfolding of a succession of causes. However,
since each cause is also an effect, it lacks being in its own essence;
it is unable to partake of existence apart from the cause superior and
precedent to it.
So how did each part of the chain, which is dominated by neediness from
one end to another, emerge from non-being? The existence of each part of
the chain manifests inadequacy, impotence, and origination in time; whence
did its existence arise? How can great and complex beings emerge from infinite
joinings of nonbeing? Does life gush forth from the union of the numerous
factors that bring about death?
However far this infinite chain is prolonged, it will still have the
attributes of neediness, dependency, and origination in time. A chain from
the very nature of which autonomy and freedom from need do not arise can
never put on the garment of being until it connects with one who is in
his essence absolutely free of need— with a being who possesses the attributes
of divinity and who is only a cause and not an effect. Without the existence
of such an unconditional being, the source of all causes and the foundation
of all existence, the order of creation cannot be explained.
Suppose that at the war front, a column of soldiers intends to attack
the enemy but none of them is ready to begin the battle by lunging into
the heart of the enemy army. Whoever is given the order to do so replies:
"I will not attack until so-and-so beings to fight." Every single soldier
repeats the same thing; there is no one unconditionally ready to begin
the attack.
Under such conditions will the attack ever take place? Of course not,
because everyone's fighting is conditional on that of someone else. It
is obvious that a whole series of conditional attacks will not take place
without the fulfillment of the condition, something impossible under the
circumstances, and, as a result, the attack will not take place.
If we continue the chain of cause and effect indefinitely, the existence
of each link in the chain will be conditional on that of the preceding
link, which, in turn, will be conditional on the existence of the link
preceding it. It is as if each link in the chain of causality were to proclaim
loudly from the depths of its being: "I shall not don the garment of existence
until that other one has set foot on the plain of being." Each link depends
on a condition that has not been fulfilled, and each one is, therefore,
barred from enjoying the blessing of existence.
Since we see the whole of the universe to be surging with different
forms of being, there must exist in the world a cause that is not an effect,
a condition that is not subject to a condition; otherwise the surface of
the world would not be this thickly covered with phenomena.
That primary cause is one who, in his essence, is free of all need,
who can dispense with all the different aspects of existence, and who is
able to bring forth the most wondrous phenomena and the most original manifestations.
He is a creator who plans all of this and then puts it into effect, who
joins all of creation to a temporal mechanism, who constantly scatters
the jewel of existence over the world, and who impels the great panorama
of creation forward to fulfil the purposes of the order of being.
By making the world non-created and eternal, the materialists try to
disprove the world's lasting need for a creator and thereby to bestow independent
existence on the world. Their method, however, does not yield satisfactory
results.
The materialist imagine that the world needs a creator only at the initial
moment of creation; once the need is met, God and the world are independent
of each other and have no links with each other. As a consequence of this
belief, the materialist proceed to deny even that initial moment of need,
and by rejecting the idea of a beginning for creation, they imagine they
have solved the problem of God and creation and liberated the world of
need for a creator.
This is because they imagine the need of the world to be temporary and
passing, whereas the need is inherent in the essence of the world—the world
is nothing but motion, a limited and dependent form of motion.
Each moment is, in fact, a beginning of creation; every instant, each
atom in the world is engaged in origination. It follows that the whole
of which the atoms area part has similarly originated in time; it does
not have an ipseity independent of that of the atoms composing it.
So the world still has the same need for a creator that it had at the
moment when creation began. Even supposing the world to be eternal, it
would still not enjoy autonomy of existence.
The Answer of Science to the Thesis of the Eternity of the World
Just as man gradually loses his faculties with the passage of time so
that one day the lamp of his life is extinguished, so, too, the universe
is constantly advancing toward collapse and dissolution. For the energies
existing in the world are gradually becoming dulled; atoms become energy,
and active energy becomes inactive and motionless. Once the atoms are uniformly
and equally divided, nothing remains but absolute silence and immobility.
It is, therefore, impossible to regard matter as the eternal essence or
substance of being, and there is no choice but to regard the world as created.
The second principle of thermodynamics, entropy or the decline of thermal
energy, teaches us that although we cannot fix a date for the appearance
of the world, the world certainly did have a beginning. The heat in the
world is gradually decreasing and falling, like a piece of molten iron
that gradually diffuses its heat in the air until finally the heat of the
iron will be identical with that of the objects and the air surrounding
it.
If there were no beginning or point of departure for the world, all
the existing atoms would have dissolved and been transformed into energy
an infinite number of years ago. In the course of a very long past, the
heat of the world would have come to an end, for matter, in the course
of its successive and continuous transformation, is transformed into perishable
energies. It is not possible for all the energy dispersed to be transformed
anew into matter and mass comfortable to the world of being.
In accordance with the principle just mentioned, once usable energy
is exhausted, chemical action and reaction can no longer take place. But
given that chemical action and reaction do take place that life is possible
on the earth, and that a huge body like the sun is divisible each day and
night into three hundred thousand million tons, it is clear that the world
has originated in time.
The death of planets and stars, the disappearance of suns, is a proof
of death and mutation in the existing order; they show that the world is
advancing towards non-being and an inevitable conclusion.
We see, then, that the natural sciences have expelled matter from the
stronghold of eternity. Science not only proves the createdness of the
world but also bears witness that the world came into existence at a given
time.
The world at the time of its birth stood in need of a preternatural
force, for at the beginning, all things were formless and undifferentiated.
It was necessary for some primordial spark of motion and life to alight
on the world of nature. How could an environment devoid of all active energy,
characterized by absolute silence and formlessness, serve as the origin
of motion and life?
Mechanics tells us that a motionless body is always motionless unless
it becomes subject to a force external to itself. This law represents an
inviolable principle in our material world, and we cannot, therefore, believe
in a theory of probability or accident. Not a single motionless body has
entered in motion up to now without being subject to an external force.
So, based on this mechanical principle, a force must exist which being
other than the world of matter, creates that world and imparts it with
energy so that it takes shapes, differentiates itself, and acquires various
aspects.
Frank Allen, an outstanding scientific personality, proposes the following
interesting argument in favor of the creation of the world by God: "Many
people have tried to demonstrate that the material world does not need
a creator. What is above all doubt is that the world does exist, and four
explanations can be proposed for its origin.
"The first is that despite what we have just said, we regard the world
as a mere dream and illusion. The second is that it has emerged from non-being
entirely of itself. The third is that the world did not have a beginning
and that it has existed eternally. The fourth is that the world has been
created.
"The first hypothesis depends on our accepting that there is, in reality,
no problem to be solved apart from the metaphysical problem of man's awareness
of self, which can also be dismissed as a dream, a fantasy, an illusion.
It is possible that someone might say that imaginary railroad trains, full
of imaginary passengers, are crossing non-existent rivers over immaterial
bridges.
"The second hypothesis, that the world of matter and energy came into
being entirely of itself, is as meaningless and absurd as the first; it
is not even worth considering in discussing.
"The third hypothesis, that the world has always existed, has one element
in common with the concept of creation, for either lifeless matter and
the energy intermingled with it or a creator have always existed. Neither
attribution of eternity presents any particular problem in itself. However,
thermodynamics has proven that the world is advancing toward a state in
which the heat of all bodies will be at a similarly low degree and usable
energy will no longer be available. Life will then become impossible.
"If the world had no beginning and existed from all eternity, such a
state of death and lifelessness would already have occurred. The brilliant
warm sun, the stars and the earth full of life bear faithful witness to
the world having originated in time; a particular moment in time marked
the beginning of creation. The world, then, cannot be other than created;
it must have been a supreme, primordial cause, an eternal, omniscient and
omnipotent creator that brought the world into being."
If man thinks deeply a little and reflects on reality with broadness
of vision, he will understand that faced with the vast geographic dimensions
of existence and the need in some way to comprehend them, he can hardly
regard his own capacity as adequate to the task. The knowledge of the system
of creation accumulated by man through his untiring efforts is next to
nothing. Although science has taken great steps forward, there is an utter
disparity between man, what man has learned, and what he still does not
know.
As far as those periods of the past are concerned that are shrouded
in total darkness, for all we know, thousands or even millions of human
species superior to the present one may have existed. Such species may
yet come into being in the future.
What is called science by the science-worshippers of the present age
and regarded by them as equivalent to the sum total of reality, is simply
a collection of laws applicable to a single dimension of the world. The
result of all human effort and experimentation is a body of knowledge concerning
a minute bright dot comparable to the dim light of a candle-surrounded
by a dark night enveloping a huge desert of indefinite extent.
If we turn back millions of years, the dust of obscurity will cover
our path as one emphatic indication of man's weakness and ignorance when
confronted with the grandeur and vastness of nature.
It may be that the period in which man has existed is nothing more than
an instant in the life of the world; it is certain that there was once
a dark ocean of non-being in which there was no trace of man. In short,
we know very little of the beginning of our journey and nothing of its
future.
At the same time, it is impossible to believe that the conditions necessary
for life exist exclusively on this tiny planet. Many scientists today regard
the sphere of life as extremely vast and broad; they present countless
millions of planets to our gaze and we look upon them by various means.
But what we are thus enabled to see is nothing more than the field of visionof
an ant when compared with the vastness of the universe.
Describing an imaginary purney to the world of infinity, Camille Flammarion,
the famous scientist, says the following in his book on astronomy: "We
continue to advance for a thousand years, for ten thousand years, for a
hundred thousand years, at the same speed, steadily, without slowing down
our vehicle, constantly moving forward along a straight line. We advance
at a speed of three hundred thousand kilometers a second. Do we imagine
that after travelling at that speed for a million years we will have reached
the limits of the visible world?
"No, there are further dark, vast spaces that must be traversed, and
there, too, new stars are visible at the limit of the heavens. We advance
toward them, but will we ever reach them?
"More millions of years; more fresh discoveries; more splendor and grandeur;
more new worlds and universes; more new beings and entities-will they never
end? The horizon never closes; the heavens never bar our path; continual
space, continual void. Where are we? What is the path we have followed?
We are still in the middle of a dot-the center of the circle is everywhere,
its circumference nowhere to be seen.
"Such is the infinite world that lies open before us, and the study
of which has barely begun. We have seen nothing, and we tum back in fear,
collapsing in exhaustion from this fruitless joumey. But where are we to
fall? We can fall for an eternity into unending whirlpools, the bottom
of which we never reach, just as we cannot reach their summit. North becomes
south; there is neither East nor West, neither up nor down, neither left
nor right. In whatever direction we look, we see infinity, and within this
endless expanse, our world is nothing more than a small island in a great
archipelago spread out across an unending ocean. The entire life of humanity,
for all the pride man takes in his political and religious history, or
even the whole life of our planet with all of its splendor, is like the
dream of a fleeting moment.
"If it were desired to write out again all the works of research penned
by millions of scholars in millions of books, the ink required for the
task would not exceed the capacity of a small tanker. But to describe and
arrange in orderly fashion the forms of all existent things upon earth
and in the heavens, in invisible past ages and in the infinite future-to
write down, in short, all the mysteries of creation-might require more
ink than the oceans contain water."ls
As Professor Ravaillet says: "In order to have a complete conception
of the world, it is enough to know that the number of galaxies in the infinite
expanse of the universe is greater than that of all the grains of sand
on all the shores in the world."
Such considerations concerning what we know and what we do not know
make it possible for us to escape imprisonment in the cocoon of our narrow
life; to become humbly aware of how small we are; to go beyond this limited
life of ours, to the degree that we are able; and to contemplate reality
with greater care and profundity;