Vlad,
what I can say though is it is either it's own explanation or it isn't and having it's own explanation has less going for it and infinite regressions of causation don't have much going for them either
Why has the universe being its own explanation “less going for it”?
And what do you think these suggest about theorigin of the universe?
They give the lie to your “argument” that because the universe is wholly determinative as a system, so therefore the universe itself must be determined by something else. The possibility of a non-determinative process within the universe throws doubt on the first part of that assertion (which is a non sequitur in any case).
You have introduced determinism. How do you fit determinism and randomness into contingency and necessity. So far you just seem to be moving the goalposts........Like Prof Davey you just seem to be giving it the old ''Naah, I don't want to talk about this.''
No, you have. Your non sequitur here is to say, “everything I observe in the universe seems to be caused by something else, therefore the universe itself must be caused by something else”. Cause and effect systems are called “determinative”; needing no cause is called “necessary”.
Nope, I've been the one inviting people to demonstrate what it is about the universe that makes it self explicable…
And you’ve been corrected on exactly that mistake several times now. No-one says that the universe necessarily
is “self-explicable”: it may be, it may not be. That’s called a “don’t know”. You on the other hand are making the express claim that it
isn’t self-explicable, so you cannot just shift the burden of proof to others to show you to be wrong about that.
If you want to make that claim, then (finally) make an argument to justify it.
What’s stopping you?
Not God of the Gaps although the Gap in question is obvious confirmed by an ''I don't know'' from your good self.
So you’re filling the space created by the “don’t know” with an answer with no explanatory value at all, ie “god”. That’s what “god of the gaps”
means ffs.
The gap is that which is between the universe just is and the universe just is because it has no cause and we know that because sufficient reason is, Hillside?
No, the gap is between “the universe had no cause” and “the universe had a cause”. No-one know which it is, though you claim it’s the latter but cannot make an argument to justify that claim. Having made it though nonetheless, you then seek to fill the knowledge gap re what that supposed cause was with the term “god”. You know, exactly the same reasoning that led people to fill the knowledge gap they had about disease with “evil spirits”.
You really are the poster boy for the Dunning-Kruger effect here: deep and profound ignorance matched only by your overwhelming conviction that you know it all. It’s frankly weird to see a real life example of it though.