Excuse me but we seem to have two of your ''evidentialists'' arguing for the existence of an unobserved part of the universe in order to prove me wrong...on no evidence.
No, we have people pointing out possible alternatives that are not compliant with your argument that, for your argument to stand, you need to disprove.
Jeremy said that the universe being the necessary entity ''works'' for him. In which case we are entitled to ask why it works for him.
You can ask that, but it's entirely irrelevant to whether your argument fails because of it; in order for your argument from contingency to stand you need to show why 'the Universe' can't be the 'necessary thing'.
God works for me because the necessary being in all it's lovely attributes not only works for me but does so because of sufficient reason whereas all that has been evidenced in the universe looks contingent and has arisen because something else changed making the something else contingent.
It can work for you as much as you like, but when you ask it to work for me you need to not just claim 'sufficient reason', you need to SHOW YOUR WORKING. Anyone can claim sufficient reason, you actually have to do the reasoning, otherwise you just have a spiritual Ponzi scheme.
If therefore there is any contradiction it is with your ''evidentists'' who are atheist on the strength of how the universe is observed to be but drop that to introduce an unobserved part of the universe.
No, there's no contradiction in claiming that possible alternative explanations show that you've failed to prove your case. You might even be right, but if you are it's not by dint of 'sufficient reason' if you can't show how that reasoning disproves alternatives.
I have the luxury of proposing an unseen non contingent part of the universe without hypocrisy, they don't.
Your hypocrisy instead lies in your repeated attempts to set up false dichotomies and shift the burden of proof.
On the other hand if they are proposing more of the same universe they are acknowledging it to be contingent.
No, they could merely be claiming that although they don't know, you don't either - and you're the one who's claiming 'sufficient reason' which implies that you should know, and should be able to convince them. You'll note that's not happened yet.
O.