Vlad,
Not really, Hillside and Jeremy have implied that I am committing the fallacy of composition without having seen the whole universe.
That’s what you have done if you want to claim that everything in the universe is contingent on something else. How would you know that everything in the universe is contingent on something else unless you’ve considered everything in the universe?
Your statement “…I should have said there is nothing in the observed universe that hasn't been observed” is as stupid as saying “there’s nothing that’s been weighed that hasn’t been weighed”. It’s just a tautology (and actually is a deepity by the way).
This is what is pointless.
But true nonetheless – you continue to commit the fallacy of composition no matter how many times your mistake is explained to you.
Firstly there is no evidence for anymore universe that has been observed....unless they are changing their definition of evidence.
Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. You really should know this after all this time.
Therefore I am not just commenting on part of the evidenced universe.that would be composition but all of it.
Yes, which is the fallacy of composition. How can you comment on “all of it” when the only evidence you have concerns just the part of it that’s been observed so far?
If you want to justify a positive claim about the universe – ie, that it must be contingent on something else – on the basis of what we know about it, then you need to:
1. Show that everything we know so far actually is contingent (itself a dubious claim).
2. Explain how you know that the parts that haven’t been observed so far must also be contingent.
3. Explain how, even if you could do 1 & 2, you could also make the leap from properties of the components of the universe also necessarily applying to the universe as a whole – that’s the fallacy of composition part.
Apart from all that though…