Vlad,
The argument from contingency has been given here many times dso you know exactly where I am coming from you.
First, you haven’t set out what your version of it is – so I set that out for you based on best guesses given your endless elusiveness about that, and your response was “back to the drawing board”, presumably to sidestep the problem that it should be
your drawing board.
Second, this has bugger all to do with the point you were trying to respond to in any case - namely that your emotional feeling about something provides no reason at all for others to take your consequent beliefs seriously. If you actually want to essay “my Vlad’s feelings about things are a better guide to objective truths than reason and evidence” (which is all you have by the way) then you’re on even thinner ice that you realise.
In an unsatisfactory rebuttal you offer Carroll, Russell and Hume and the universe just is.
Which as you well know isn’t the argument at all. First, the cosmological argument fails because of the inherent flaws, contradictions and leaps of faith it requires that keep being explained to you and that you keep ignoring. Second, the actual position on the origin of the universe is “don’t know”, but alongside it is, “but we cannot rule out the universe being its own explanation”.
That is incorrect. Although as I have learnt your desire for God to have no good reason supporting it or to be totally different to the creator of SU renders you invincibly ignorant of the relative importance of divine attributes.
Have you deliberately misrepresented the argument that undoes you here, or can you genuinely not grasp it? Yet again, universe creation may be
necessary for the “Abrahamic God”, but it’s not
sufficient for it for exactly the same reason that hoof marks are necessary for unicorns but are not sufficient for them. Until you finally sort out your necessaries from your sufficients you will continue to make a fool of yourself about this.
But so vehement is his dislike of God it even prevents him from entertainment something about the universe which is both necessary and with sufficient reason. By definition there is no good reason to accept what you, he and Carroll propose, that the universe ''Just is.''
So few words, so many mistakes…
First, his dislike of anything is neither here nor there provided his reasoning about the claims made for it are sound.
Second, (and wearily yet again), it’s not “God” – it’s
the claim “God”.
Third, for the reasons he keeps explaining and you keep ignoring, your conjecture “God” is neither necessary nor has sufficient reason.
Fourth, you’ve just misrepresented again the “just is” point (see above).
And I bought a tube of preparation H.
Whoosh!