https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/cosmological-argument/#Obje3PrinCausSuffReasSusp
Fucking hell! At last! Okay, let's set it out here:-
- A contingent being (a being such that if it exists, it could have not-existed) exists.
- All contingent beings have a sufficient cause of or fully adequate explanation for their existence.
- The sufficient cause of or fully adequate explanation for the existence of contingent beings is something other than the contingent being itself.
- The sufficient cause of or fully adequate explanation for the existence of contingent beings must either be solely other contingent beings or include a non-contingent (necessary) being.
- Contingent beings alone cannot provide a sufficient cause of or fully adequate explanation for the existence of contingent beings.
- Therefore, what sufficiently causes or fully adequately explains the existence of contingent beings must include a non-contingent (necessary) being.
- Therefore, a necessary being (a being such that if it exists, it cannot not-exist) exists.
- The universe, which is composed of only contingent beings, is contingent.
- Therefore, the necessary being is something other than the universe.
The first thing to note is that it's not an argument for a god, even if it was entirely sound. So, even if we accept it all, we can still say that we don't know what the 'necessary being' is.
Objection 3: The Principles of Causation and Sufficient Reason Are Suspect
They are indeed (as you can read there), which undermines the argument's soundness. The PSR is a philosophical principle and a
controversial one at a that. It is not something that has been proved or that we can rely on when it comes to existence itself. Step 5 is also questionable, as has already been discussed. There is also an implicit assumption that there is only one 'necessary being', that hasn't been justified. Step 8 seems to be a fallacy of composition and, in the light of general relativity, the space-time manifold does not appear to be contingent on anything (at least not obviously).
So, all round, a bit of a dismal failure. Multiple steps are highly questionable and it wouldn't be an argument for a god anyway.
Now can you reference those papers where the argument from Contingency has been ''sunk''.
As I said, I was playing your game to point out the absurdity of continuing to make claims about something that you have never produced or referenced. I seem to have made my point.