New remarks on the Cosmological Argument
Gustavo E. Romero, Daniela P\'erez

TL;DR
This paper formally analyzes the Cosmological Argument's main forms, revealing logical weaknesses and scientific inconsistencies, and concludes that the Kalam argument is fallacious while Aquinas's version is scientifically dubious.
Contribution
It provides a formal logical analysis of Aquinas and Kalam versions of the Cosmological Argument, highlighting their flaws and reinterpretations in scientific terms.
Findings
Kalam argument commits a fallacy of equivocation.
Aquinas's premises are dubious in scientific context.
The conclusions do not necessarily follow from the assumptions.
Abstract
We present a formal analysis of the Cosmological Argument in its two main forms: that due to Aquinas, and the revised version of the Kalam Cosmological Argument more recently advocated by William Lane Craig. We formulate these two arguments in such a way that each conclusion follows in first-order logic from the corresponding assumptions. Our analysis shows that the conclusion which follows for Aquinas is considerably weaker than what his aims demand. With formalizations that are logically valid in hand, we reinterpret the natural language versions of the premises and conclusions in terms of concepts of causality consistent with (and used in) recent work in cosmology done by physicists. In brief: the Kalam argument commits the fallacy of equivocation in a way that seems beyond repair; two of the premises adopted by Aquinas seem dubious when the terms `cause' and `causality' are…
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