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Fine. Special pleading involves applying standards or rules to others but not to oneself, without providing adequate justification. If one provides adequate justification, one is by definition not engaging special pleading.
Okay, let's explore. I'm ready to eat 'humble pie', so to speak...
Any well-crafted cosmological argument will start by defining God as the First Principle, that which is uncaused, etc., and the entire argument is geared towards the idea that any contingent chain of events needs an initial cause. To accuse a defender of a cosmological argument of special pleading because they are exempting God from needing a cause is to miss the point of the argument entirely. For the sake of simplicity, we are referring to a theoretical First Cause with the term "God." Given that we are attempting to provide an alternative to an infinite regress, exempting God from needing a cause is justified, as God is by definition where the chain ends.
From reading your response, it would appear you are saying, 'you first assert that God is of a first cause.' You then state 'any chain of events needs a first cause.'
I already see apparent pitfalls...?
Why could I not assert some other alternative causing agent/agents?
The entire argument begs it's own question. It merely pushes the problem back one step. The 'asserter' assumes the statement under examination to be true. In other words, begging the question involves using a premise to support itself. 'God IS the first cause'. Nothing more than a blank assertion... Or, an example of an argument from ignorance, in that I cannot think of a possibility of infinite causal chains, thus... God.
Furthermore, special pleading also means 'an attempt to cite something as an exception to a generally accepted rule, principle, etc. without justifying the exception.' Or, 'appeals to give a particular interest group special treatment'. Why is your specific brand of God THE first cause? Why couldn't it be alien(s), a universe in a test tube ran by Thor, why does this agent need to be divine, how do we know this agent was not also created by something prior?
Trust me, I actually get what you are saying. You are telling me this is how the theist will present the argument. But you must admit, it is nothing more than blank assertions, followed by flawed reasoning.
The cosmological argument appears trivial, at best, with a 'horn-swaggled' assertion attached. We have no evidence for 'creation ex nihilo', only 'ex materia'. Is this demanding evidence, by way of empiricism? Maybe so... However, if the universe is actually eternal, then to ask such a question of 'what banged the big bang' would end up being as nonsensical as asking, 'what is colder than absolute zero?'
You can criticize cosmological arguments on other grounds (though I don't think successfully), but the accusation of special pleading is just wrong. Well, unless someone is trying to say that Yahweh can be the First Cause but Allah or Brahman cannot. I'm not sure I've seen that outside of atheistic caricatures, though.
Disagree. Thus far, your justification is a mere blank assert. Which is, 'God is the uncaused causer,' without even demonstrating that such an agent was not themselves created.
but I'm not particularly interested in apologetics.
You might want to venture off to other arenas then, because you are 'knee deep' in it
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