Well, I don´t seem to disagree with most of this.
However, this doesn´t change the fact that when you tell me there´s a hypothesis and want to discuss with me on basis of this hypothesis you would have to make it known to me.
If by "known" you mean "just known enough to know what we're both talking about", then let's try looking at figurative language. You know, we rarely think literally, and some people would say that all language has metaphor at its heart.
So maybe God is *like* a father in that he has created the universe and cares for it, and is *like* infinitely extending presence that goes beyond the universe's limits -- as if you're imagining the universe expanding into a force that extends infinitely. Remember, simile.
Sorry, I have reread the paragraph you´ve quoted several times, but I couldn´t find a single "me" in it.
Sorry, what I meant was something like: because we can't understand something like "me" as a self, or can't define it really at all (except metaphorically and very incompletely), we can compare God or any other elusive metaphysical or abstract concept to this.
That happens to be a question I don´t have.
But you have a stance on it, do you not? I understand that if the question is meaningless (which I've argued isn't because God can't be articulated, but that he can't be articulated fully or literally, just like a lot of other abstract concepts), you can't really have a position on it. But you presumably do have an answer to the question of whether the universe was caused or uncaused, which would implicate God as a possible answer, for which you've rejected. So if you have rejected it, why? In your rejection, you're essentially no different than a theist who accepts it -- you have no "proof" (scientifically), you only have arguments that are subtle and difficult.
Please explain.
Personally, I am not even convinced that the universe needs a reason.
Secondly, if the answer to the question is "God is the reason" "God" remains just a spaceholder for "I don´t know.". It´s just a word, it doesn´t explain anything.
Saying the universe doesn't need a reason invites its own explanation. You have a reason for saying there is no reason. And God isn't quite a placeholder for not knowing, in the sense that using God as a theoretical explanation for metaphysical problems is any different than any other type of hypothesis ("God in the gaps" isn't a real fallacy, and might be considered fallacious itself); in other words, all theoretical explanations are explanations for "not knowing." There's nothing about using God as an explanation that makes him less palatable *logistically* than anything else when we're talking about explanations.
No, I need something to be falsifiable in order to accept it as a "hypothesis".
This a contradiction. If you need something falsifiable for it to qualify as a hypothesis, then you would by definition need to apply this to your very concept of falsifiability. Because your concept of falsifiability is technically unfalsifiable, you can't use it, so you've got to find some other way of determining what constitutes a hypothesis or theory.
By saying "falsifiability is technically unfalsfiable," I'm just being honest with your demands. If you say:
1) All hypotheses must be falsifiable to be worthy of hypotheses, and
2) Statement (1) is unfalsifiable, then
3) Statement (1) is false, because it is an unfalsifiable statement, which means
4) Not all hypotheses must be falsifiable in order to qualify as hypotheses.