Vlad,
Because the evidence we have is that all observed things in the universe indeed the observed universe is contingent and not necessary.
A dubious claim at best, but in any case when do you plan to explain why properties observed
in a system must also therefore apply
to the system itself?
Any argument from any supposedly unobserved universe eg I am making the fallacy of composition in subsequently unevidenced.
Wrong again. YOU’RE the one making the claim – ie, that a property of the constituents of the universe that we’ve observed must also apply to the universe itself – and unless YOU can finally justify it, that’s precisely the fallacy of composition.
The temptation though is to believe in the unobserved universe as an extrapolation of what we see. That only yields more contingency. Indeed such a view is I would move is necessary to maintain your atheism. Contingency alone is insufficiently reasonable because my subsequent question is always going to be ''contingent on what''.
This is just incoherent. Your “temptations” are epistemically worthless, and in any case even if I were to follow you down this rabbit hole my question would also be the same about your assertion “god” – ie, contingent on what? As your answer to that is effectively “magic”, you’re adding nothing to the limited verifiable knowledge we already have about the universe.
If we are talking the whole universe here we eventually come to the question contingent on what? Don't know is insufficient becuase we do know the properties of a necessary being. It is unobservable, it is necessary for a contingent universe, it is independent of that universe, it is independent of any other in it's creativity. For people who had forgotten about necessity, who had had it witheld from them by an agnostic culture or who just downright have ignored it this might be enough to start thinking about in the first instance.
Now it may be there is something about the universe which is necessary. What is it? Why aren't we seeing it? It cannot be anything we observe because we observe contingency.
More white noise. We don’t come to the question “contingent on what?” at all – what we actually come to is, “we don’t know whether the universe as a whole must be contingent on something else”. That’s the don’t know part. By all means though if you think it must be then have a go at explaining why (I’ll alert the Nobel committee to your imminent scientific breakthrough), but until you can you’re stuck in the same nursery-level thinking: “my head hurts because that branch hit me, therefor the universe has a creator”.
If you are proposing a holistic necessity about then that is merely a belief. The trouble is holistic properties are contingent on the levels beneath from which they emerge.
Burden of proof mistake (again). I’m not proposing anything remember? All I’m doing is pointing out the fallacies and gaps in the justifications YOU attempt for the claims and assertions YOU make.
The trouble here for your grumpy self righteous argument is that you accused me of the fallacy of composition based on the unobserved. You said I was wrong but it seems you were wrong.
No it doesn’t – see above. If you want to leap straight from observable phenomena being contingent to the universe as a whole being contingent then you continue to commit the fallacy of composition. If I said that, based on one person standing at the cricket match having a better view, everyone standing at the cricket match would therefore have a better view would your charge of my making the fallacy of composition be wrong because you hadn’t observed every spectator standing up?
Can you see now where you keep going wrong? Anything?
If you are saying there is something necessary about the contingent universe a) what is it? b) aren't you straying into deepity?
I’m saying no such thing. There may or may not be something necessary about the universe itself – I have no idea. Nor though have you, and you're the only one making the positive assertion about this here remember? Try as you might to shift the burden of proof, that’s still what you’re doing. Until and unless you finally make an argument for a contingent universe that isn’t full of mistake and holes, all other have to do is to identify those mistakes and holes – a trivially easy thing to do.
Infinite regress doesn't answer the question. In fact it is a diversionary device and arguing that there is insufficient reason for the principle of sufficient is just plainly comical.
No – it’s a point that undoes you. Your only way out of your problem of infinite regress is “it’s magic innit” – which makes you the person in the cartoon who writes a formula and inserts into it “miracle happens here”. How do you think that adds anything to the sum total of human knowledge?