Vlad,
If you think it is a crock demonstrate it is one.....hint. The Kalam cosmological argument is not the only one but it would be nice to just once see you demolish it.
Not holding ma breath though.
You know full well the flaws with cosmological argument (and its variants) because they’ve been explained to you many times before now albeit that you either ignore or misrepresent the explanations. Now we’ve smoked out what you’re really up to though, to varying degrees:
1. It’s an argument from personal incredulity fallacy: “I can’t imagine how the universe happened, therefore god”.
2. It’s a god of the gaps fallacy: “No-one can answer my question, therefore god”.
3. It just assumes that determinism within the universe must also be necessary for there to be a universe.
4. It ignores (or is ignorant of) various competing hypotheses that could answer the origin of the universe question.
5. It just transfers the problem of causation somewhere else, then relies on magic to get that something else off the same hook.
6. At best it’s an argument for a causal agent, but not for a necessarily deistic one.
7. Even if you could find a way to argue for a deistic cause that tells you nothing about which deity – ie, it’d be an argument for deism but not for theism.
Just for fun, imagine a Norseman said, “OK, explain thunder then” and was given:
1. A complete scientific explanation; or
2. A partial explanation but with some gaps; or
3. No explanation at all.
Which of these would provide a rationale for Thor would you say?
Is it sinking in yet? Anything?
Nuther hint.
I don't know, but it ain't God is nota very good look.
No, it probably wouldn’t be if anyone ever actually said that. As it’s one of your favourite straw men though, here’s its rebuttal once again: "no good reason to think it’s god" is NOT the same thing as "it isn’t god".
Now write that down 1,000 times, or at least as many times as it takes for you to stop lying about it.