Vlad,
I don't think that's the point. ''The question is on what is the contingent part of the universe contingent on'' to go along with that another question is why is it that all we observe is contingent?''
Yes it is the point. You can’t go straight to “on what is it contingent?” without establishing first that it’s contingent
at all. That’s the
a priori question you keep running away from.
I have made it clear, time after time not that the universe cannot be necessary but asked what it is about the universe which is necessary? Answer comes their none.
You haven’t “made it clear” at all – you’ve just asserted it. Whenever you’re asked to justify your assertion though you vanish. That’s the only “answer comes there none” here.
If we are into the fallacy of composition then you acknowledge this is about the composition of the universe.
Nope, no idea what you’re trying to say here. Yet again, the fallacy of composition here is your assumption that a property seen
within the universe (causality) must also apply
to the universe itself.
So I will say this once again regarding it. If the big wall made of tiny bricks analogy the argument you are making, I have to tell you this
. The size of the wall and the brick is your argument for how the things in the universe could be contingent but the universe is necessary.
But that would mean that the necessity is due to and dependent on the contingency.....rendering it contingent rather than necessary.
A better argument is that the bricks are red and that makes a red wall so the components of the universe are contingent and the universe is contingent and then we have to ask on what.
This is just incoherent. It's white noise. Static on the TV after the national anthem has ended. Yet again: how do you propose to justify your claim that a property seen in components of the universe must also apply to the universe as a whole?
Why do you keep running away from this simple question?
This is not just saying or asserting Hillside this is giving reasons for why something is necessary either for or about the universe.
No, it’s exactly just asserting. And your reasons for the assertion are – so far at least – something you cannot or will not set out.
Why is that?
Why Deism does not fit the bill. This is because it assumes that the universe is now independent ontologically from God and ignores the possibility of it's having a maintained existence. It appeals to a temporally linear view and ignores vertical instantaneous heirarchies of dependence, It limits god to a rule of non intervention, but definitionally the necessary entity is self directing.
Are you using some kind of random word generator here? Even when I try to pick out some sense from this car crash of a paragraph I can tell that it rests on your usual tropes of straw manning, arse-backwards thinking, conflating the possible with the probable etc.
If you really want to persist with this nonsense could you at least give your head a wobble first, try to compose sentences in recognisable English and god help us try at least to eliminate your standard reasoning howlers.
Even if there was a deist God how does it help atheism?
It wouldn’t (not “doesn’t”), but the point was that even if you could finally resolve the mistakes and problems with your attempt at the cosmological argument,
still all it
would give you at most is deism. Your problem though is that you haven’t resolved them at all (nor even for that matter tried to) so even deism is as yet way beyond your reach.
Even by your dismal standards this is a grim effort Vlad.