Vlad,
You are still making a Kalam type argument.
No,
you linked to an argument (presumably approvingly) that did. Here in fact:
“
1. It does not rest on the premise that “everything has a cause” which would leave open the question of what caused God. Rather the argument is that whatever comes into existence (is contingent) has a cause…”
Can you see that “.
.comes into existence”? Can you though?
What do you suppose those words
mean?
There, there is a straw man!
Yes, but it’s your straw man. Either you approve of the argument you linked to or you don’t – perhaps if you made your mind up about that?
Why is this? is it the only version of the Game you think you can win at?.......or do you really not understand the argument from contingency
If you link to an argument, that’s the one I’ll demolish. I really don’t care much whether you though are in thrall to the Kalam or the cosmological argument, they’re both shit. If you’re now backing away from the argument you linked to though, then I’ll take it off the list.
I am not using the word ''cause'' in the sense of something having a beginning. I am using it in terms of explanation, reason, entity responsible for it's existence. There is no time element here.
Well, that’s not the argument you linked to and now you’re trying to bend the word “cause” to mean something other than its conventional sense: if you no longer care about the “comes into existence” part how could something (ie “the universe”) that (presumably) always existed have been caused by something else when there was no dimension in which the universe ever didn’t already exist? “Cause” here becomes incoherent.
Therefore an eternal universe could be there because of an eternal creator.
“Therefore”? Very funny. Much as you enjoy throwing in a false therefore without bothering to define your term or to argue your way to justify your conclusion perhaps you might like to turn your attention to why an eternal universe would require a creator at all, and for that matter why your eternal creator wouldn’t need an eternal creator of its own?
How are you going to show that the universe is eternal anyway?
I don’t know what’s wrong with you. I really don’t. I don’t need to show that the universe is eternal because
that’s not a claim that I make. The only “claim” I make about an eternal vs a finite universe is that I don’t know. And nor do you.
You’ve never understood (or have always lied about) the fallacy of shifting the burden of proof but there are only so many times it can be explained to you.
Secondly, How are you going to show that it is necessary and not contingent?
See above. I don’t need to “show” anything: it’s
your assertion – it’s
your job to make argument to justify it. So far though,
you haven’t even tried.