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Gallery of the Rotunda, Library of Congress, LC-D4-13499

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Citation Information for “Thomas Aquinas, ‘The Argument From Motion’”

This page is not intended to be original or authoritative. The page is a summary of some main points and associated notes on the topic. Undoubtedly, there are scholarly and authoritative sources, both primary and secondary which ought be cited rather than these notes.

However if you find the page of use, your citation should meet the style requirements of the publication for which you are submitting your paper. In general, the current page may be cited in this manner:

Archie, Lee C, "Thomas Aquinas, ‘The Argument From Motion,’" Philosophy of Religion (June 26, 2006) URL=<http://philosophy.lander.edu/intro/motion.shtml>.

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“The external structure of the prima via is obviously taken by Thomas from Aristotle. … Thomas has assembled certain elements taken from Aristotle into an argument which, compared to the specific cosmological setting of the Aristotelian reasoning, impresses the reader as rather formal in structure and independent of any cosmological consideration. For Aristotle, the notion of a prime mover is inextricably connected with a cosmological theory according to which the movements of terrestrial bodies depends on the perfect circular movements of the heavenly bodies, which in their turn require a series of immaterial and immobile movers of the source of their motion.” Rudi A. te Velde Aquinas on God (Ashgate Publishing, 2006), 49.

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