Vlad,
Where did I do that ?
Here:
If yes it suffers from being a part because a necessary being would then be dependent or contingent on the parts and therefore not be the necessary being.
(Though to be fair your attempts are expressing thoughts are often so garbled that it’s hard to tell what you do intend, which is why I expressed my reply initially as a question).
As for you changing the context…
You meant to say there, “as for my accusation that you…” etc, but ok…
I'm talking about contingency and necessity without having specified that a random event or determinism is contingent or necessary.
If an event is “truly” random than it can’t be contingent. Whatever might be sitting behind it cannot know what the outcome will be. That’s what "random" requires.
You seem to be hedging wanting randomness to have the flexibility to be deterministic and visa versa.
And now you’re doing it again! Try to understand here – really try: so far as I can tell there’s no reason a random process could not produce an outcome that’s deterministic. If, just for sake of discussion, we allow for some randomness at a base level of reality we still see everywhere deterministic outcomes in nature.
If you seriously think though that a non-deterministic process cannot produce deterministic outcomes then explain
why rather than just assert it.
Indeed You have run the following ideas: The bits of the universe are contingent and somehow the final step in the chain of it's own explanation, There is a hidden determinism, Determinism could arise from randomness, randomness may really not be randomness at all but determinism.
As so often, your inability to distinguish between a discussion of
possibilities and making claims of
probabilities is letting you down.
Either you can fit these into a context of contingency and necessity or the rest of us will have the pleasure of trying.
Or you could try reading what I’ve actually said and then addressing that rather than misrepresenting it.
It’s your call though.