Vlad,
If you say something is contingent on x and x is contingent then given the definition of contingency we have to ask what it is it is contingent on. Deviation from that is the running away bit Hillside.
Incoherent. What are you even trying to say here? The NHS is “contingent” on having nurses – ie, it couldn’t function without them; nurses are “contingent” on the NHS (ie, they wouldn’t be hired if there was no NHS). That’s not a tautology though, which is the mistake you made.
Stating that x gives existence to y which gives existence to x just conjure stuff but you know this having projected the magic onto me.
It's not “gives existence” to as in “causes”, it’s just a statement that the fact of a universe made of its composite parts does not imply that the universe must also be contingent on something other than itself – you know, the assertion you keep running away from justifying.
Regarding the fallacy of composition You proposed the universe was merely the sum of it's contingent parts.
So it appears, yes.
You the said I said the universe was contingent because parts of it were.
No I didn’t. I said that the universe is “contingent” inasmuch as it wouldn’t exist (either at all or in its current form) without the parts of which it consists. Nothing more, nothing less.
Not so Hillside
The universe you proposed then is contingent not because of the contingency of its parts but because, as you propose it is the sum of parts.
So much for the Hillside argument and context.
Did this gibberish mean something in your head when you typed it?
What I say is show me something that isn't contingent and is responsible for its own being.
Well, according to you, "God". I have no reason to think that "the universe" isn't such a something in any case, and certainly no non-fallacious reason that you've managed to offer.
The default position is everything ever observed is contingent. So I could play your game.
Not necessarily – we don’t know whether “true” randomness happens at the quantum level – but for the sake of argument let’s say that everything we’ve observed in the universe is contingent on antecedent things.
So, how then do you jump from that to “therefore the universe itself must be contingent on its antecedent things" (ie, "God") without falling into the fallacy of composition again?
Stop trying then to shift the burden of proof, stop running away, exile yourself to the grounds of your estate and eat grass as a penance
Simply accusing others without grounds of your own behaviours if pathetic. And dishonest.
Yet again: WHY DO YOU THINK THE UNIVERSE AS AN ENTITY MUST BE CONTINGENT ON SOMETHING OTHER THAN ITSELF?