A creator can be a source yes. I say creator because it does not do things by accident nor by any natural law. It is acting only in accordance with itself. There is nothing natural which approaches this level of freedom to act so to liken it to any natural source is inadequate and a god like interpretation far more adequate.
This totally contradicts what you've previously claimed abut things that are necessary. If it has a
choice, then it could have
chosen differently, in which case, it would have
been different, and something that could have been different (according to what you've said before) can't be necessary.
Unfortunately if you are depending on what you have argued with Alan all you have done is argued that there is nothing in nature that has the level of freedom to act as the necessary being has.
No. A choice also requires a time dimension, so anything that makes a choice must be contingent on time.
A random source would imply a random universe and not one at all penetrable to reason.
As I already pointed out, given enough randomness, you'd get any degree of order just by chance. Specifically, given an infinite amount you would necessarily have arbitrarily large amounts of order.
For example things would be more likely to pop out of nothing if we’re we talking about a random source only.
Like entire orderly universes, given enough randomness.
All arguments based on the conservation of energy are then predicated on a non random source.
Somewhat irrelevant but I don't know why people obsess about energy conservation. To the extent it's applicable (and it's not at all straightforward in general relativity - it applies
locally but it's not at all clear how to apply it generally), it's due to a
symmetry in the laws of physics, just like conservation of momentum.
Also, as I pointed out some time ago, when we were talking about Feser's 'base of hierarchy', Tegmark's idea that all mathematical structures might necessarily exist, fits the the notion far, far better than something with thoughts and the ability to choose (all examples of which that we know of actually
require order to exist). That's where Feser's argument became comical as he tried to bash the square peg of his notion of god into the round hole he'd just argued for.