Which you've repeatedly been shown not to understand.
How can I put this diplomatically? If I was giving advice to a visitor expecting justification of this it would be along the lines of don’t hold your breath
That's a potentially valid question, but that the question exists doesn't mean that you can reject the potential and continue with your presumption that therefore there can be only one necessary entity.
You're presuming that there's an underlying 'something' - that's not been demonstrated. You've asked the question 'why multiple necessary things', presumed there's an answer and gone with that. We could equally ask the question 'why god and not nothing', and then just go with that.
If you go into the question with an expectation, you're likely to fall foul of confirmation bias at the very least.
The trouble with applying the Principle of Sufficient Reason is that you have to know what that actually means, not what you want it to mean.
No, you're suffering from an anthropomorphic limitation - you see this is as a circular process, but it's not a process, it's a four-dimensional structure that exists as an entirety. We experience it as 'changing' because our subjective experience is limited from within the structure, restricted to movement through time within a narrow band, but independent of that subjective experience of time it isn't a process it's just a singular entity.
O.
[/quote] Again we can ask why it is a four dimensional entity and not a three dimension or nine dimension. If it has structure, why that particular structure.
You contradict yourself by assuming one entity while castigating me for assuming one entity.