I'm not sure even you know what you mean by the concept of a necessary being being highly problematic is.
Since I've explained several times now, what the problems are with it, I suppose that if it hasn't sunk in by now, it probably never will.
All you seem to be saying is the most rational thing to say is ''we don't know.''
FFS, yes.
At what point in the argument from contingency do you propose that comes in? Hence my first question what is it you don't know and at what point do we not know.
It's not that I don't know something about the argument from contingency, it's that I don't know which, if any, of the proposed solutions to the question of why things exist and are the way they are, is right, because they all come with logical problems.
Let me run through the argument again.
Here is an object what is the reason it exists? Here is the universe, what is the reason it exists? Whatever the reason is it must exist independently of the universe and it must have acted independently of the universe. Where is the problem?
That's not even in the form of a logical argument - it's just two questions and an unargued assertion. What's more it never even reaches the conclusion of a necessary entity. You haven't said why the universe necessarily needs an explanation for its existence. You haven't said why, if it does have a reason, that that reason is something that can 'act' in some way, rather than just be some sort of static principle, for example.
There simply isn't an argument there to refute.
...The universe could just be. The problem here is that it arbitrarily suspends the principle of sufficient reason in a special plead.
Yes, in exactly the same way as you do, one step removed from the universe, when you imagine that you've reached something that you might be able to label 'god'. It's all comically contrived: "Oh no, we can't possibly just suspend the PSR for the universe, but we can once we've got to the reason for it, because I like that better, 'cos I might get away with calling it 'god', with the excuse of calling in 'necessary' first, and then pretending that I haven't suspended the PSR at all."
I'd say you couldn't make it up, but you did.