Well, yes that could be clumsiness on my part what I mean to say is, “There is a reason why the universe would be a timeloop rather than a time line, there would be a reason why there are a fixed number of events, although I grant you are saying that those reasons might be internal. I am not presuming an external element, an internal, independent, necessary element would satisfy the demands just as well.
OK, I'm still not sure I'm in full agreement that there's a 'reason' for one rather than the other. There might be, but surely the idea that it's the 'necessary' thing means that it doesn't have a cause? By definition, then, isn't that saying there is no 'reason', it is the thing at the bottom that simply is?
It cannot though by definition be found in anything contingent since you cannot be contingent and the necessary entity just like you cannot be a square circle or black and white at the same time.
That's presuming our understanding of contingency is adequate, which given we've evolved to think in a very narrow set of circumstances and we are considering possibilities that unfathomably beyond those restrictions we can't be definitive on that, I don't think (I'll continue this lower on the idea of time).
In terms of consciousness that is a fearful gun jump on your parts since necessary entities are viewed by you as a doorway to God imho.... more to follow
I don't see necessary entities as anything, I'm not sure I see them as viable as a concept. What I do see is that 'necessary' is often a step on a pathway to 'therefore God'.
But is that how time works?
Time is something internal to this universe, so far as we can tell. Given that, presumably, any understanding we're searching for includes the inception of this universe as one of those contingent steps - certainly that's how I've been looking at this - then whether or not that's how time works isn't really relevant.
Is the universe and time included in it not the result of entropy going from maximum order to disorder with heat death along the way?
Within the universe entropy appears to be tending in one direction, with localised disruptions to that. Outside of the universe, given (as above) that time is a universal element, I'm not sure that concepts like entropy which rely on the notion of change make any sense.
Again, you need to postulate a mechanism
I think you're mistaking what's happening here - I'm not proposing this as the answer, I'm pointing out that it's a technical possibility and therefore undermines the notion that we have to get to some static, necessary, independent unit. This is not my solution, this is an argument against other claims. When it comes to an explanation for reality, I'm not sure that I have one that makes sense to me - I keep coming back to feeling like the only thing that makes sense is an infinite chain of causitive mechanisms.
Nature is the Necessary element then. So “nature” is the necessary entity.
I'd be more inclined to say 'reality', I think - nature comes with opportunities for misinterpretation. But that does lead to the slightly tautological reality is the necessary element for everything we can currently see.
The trouble is the contingency of natural things. If the necessary being had parts there would be the question”Why parts?”
Except that in the loop model 'why' doesn't makes sense. Wherever you are in the loop, the next step is inevitable - there are causes, but there aren't reasons. How makes sense; why doesn't.
The reason being beyond and independent of the parts.
Why does there have to be a 'reason'? And if there were, why would it have to be external to that? You are implicitly rejecting the notion, and then using that rejection to provide arguments against the notion.
Parts also give rise to the question of primacy of parts and even necessity of certain parts.
It could lead to the question of whether there is a primacy of parts, but it doesn't require that there be one. Each of the 'parts' is reality, just in a different configuration, a different manifestation. Maybe if we made it a 'trinity' you'd find it more comfortable to accept a notion of one thing that is also three
The answer or answers have to be independent of the parts themselves.
If you are going to assume that, then you have to apply that to, say 'God' as well - if everything has to have an external reason, then you are rejecting the notion of a necessary thing in the first place. It's always going to be dependent on something else.
O.