We reason that something exists necessarily and to declare that everything is contingent is nonsense. It's God or the universe.
More meaningless foot-stamping. We (as Carroll points out) don't even know if we can frame the same sort of questions about reality itself as we can about things within it.
It's God or the universe.
Drivel. 'God' is meaningless waffle without further qualification and this, even if we accept that something must be necessary, is (regardless of which definition you choose today) a
false dichotomy. It would be the universe or
something else.
But declared philosophical naturalist Carroll is confronted with the problem that nothing in the universe seems necessary...
Do I really need to explain
yet again how the universe (the space-time manifold) might 'just be'?
...and to bypass this appeals to the universe being a necessary entity with no explanation or sufficient reason and imho this is handwaving waffle.
It make far, far more sense than just making up something you desperately want to believe in and then declaring it necessary with with no explanation or sufficient reason.
Although this is preferable to your hysterical rhetoric.
Comical.
And yet again (as you ignored it): are you
ever going to
even try to put forward some sort of compete and coherent argument for a well defined version of 'god'? Until you do, there is no case to answer. You're many and varied versions of 'god' are just empty, hand-waving waffle.