![]() ![]() ![]() After a careful reading of his writings, however, doubts arise about his unbelief. In a quote presented in the discussion, Hawking defines himself as an atheist. ![]() Only the latter one accepts causality from outside space and time, with other words, a reality transcending the material world. However, its meaning, in the modern scientific and philosophical literature, is limited to temporal causality in contrast to the view of classical philosophy. Causality is the central concept employed by Hawking. The current study presents a philosophical analysis of this search in terms of the classical philosophy of Aristotle and Aquinas. In the posthumous publication Brief Answers to the Big Questions, he continues with his quest for the ultimate truth. With his bestselling publication, A Brief History of Time, Stephen Hawking introduced in 1988 a new genre by connecting modern science with the question of the existence of God. Hawking, truth, creator, causality, existence of God, Aquinas, Aristotle Abstract ![]()
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