If you abandon logic, you abandon reason. That seems too great a sacrifice just to save a fallacious argument. YMMV.
We always argue from OUR human, temporal, ignorant perspective. It is never done without presupposition.
The fallacy disappears, if the assumption is correct. Assuming first cause, first cause is the default principle from which everything else descends. Thus, even what has been assumed as a reliable method is only useful for temporal knowledge, and is not
the basis for measurement of reliable argument.
TLDL, even at 2x speed. But if you think it's worth the effort, perhaps you could summarize his points. Regarding aseity, as I've said before, why not cut out the middle-manGod and have the universe itself be self-existent?
Because if God/ First Cause exists, then the universe is below him, not above him. He's not middle-man. The "omni" is even below First Cause. If First Cause exists, existence and reality itself, are caused to be what they are by it.
Maybe it makes sense to you because you're so accustomed to the belief, but to me, an entity with superpowers only makes sense in the Marvel universe, i.e. as fantasy fiction.
But if he is God, i.e. omnipotent, first cause, he is not just an entity with superpowers. He's not just "wow". He is the source of very reality.
It may offer you emotional comfort or satisfaction, but as an explanation, it's totally lacking - it has no explanatory power - it isn't testable, has no supporting evidence, makes no predictions, has no specificity, gives no insight or understanding of what it purports to explain, raises more questions than it answers, is not consistent with current knowledge, and can 'explain' anything, so explains nothing.
BUT, it does explain existence, as nothing else does —begging the question or not. And the problem with the notion that this is begging the question and therefore a logical fallacy, is that saying so assumes validity to the humanocentric (or temporal) value of concept, phrase and argument. IF God exists, the argument starts there, and not with our method of testing. GOD is default fact (if he exists).
You say you prefer to suppose no anthropomorphism, but you use the capitalization generally reserved for the anthropomorphic Christian God, and you refer it with male-gendered pronouns... As I said above, God (or god) can be whatever you imagine it to be - if I had to choose, I would choose Einstein's god, the natural universe.
The Christian God is too often described anthropomorphically —with that I agree. But the Bible's descriptions are toe to toe with good philosophy.
As for the "male-gendered pronouns", males are only one of the many things that are masculine. It is a masculine pronoun. And I have no problem accepting the notion that God is considerably more masculine than any male. But I will admit that is only my impression. I do, after all, insist that the Omnipotent does not answer to form.
That's why it's important to test their validity and treat truth claims with scepticism and always as provisional - i.e. the methodology of science & critical thinking. Experience suggests we should prefer parsimonious explanations and avoid the temptation to invent untestable ideas about the world outside our current framework of knowledge or make truth claims about them. There's nothing wrong with admitting we don't know or we're uncertain.
Agreed. But again, the fact WE can't prove first cause, doesn't say the argument is illogical, and certainly not irrational, because of its very meaning. It only says we can't currently prove it. But it does answer all sorts of questions we cannot otherwise answer (admittedly it also induces in us all sorts of merely superstitious notions).
It will sound circular to look at it from our current perspective to say it that way, but from the perspective of the assuming of the existence of First Cause, it does not look circular, unlike with any other item we assume to be true. The argument begins with IT as causal of all other fact.
And no, not because the Cheshire Cat, the Mad Hatter nor the Caterpillar would say so.
We are made of protons, neutrons, and electrons. We have a model that describes all their significant interactions and all the forces that significantly influence them as far as the everyday world of human activity is concerned. This model has been tested and confirmed literally millions of times - it does allow that there may be unknown particles or forces that can have influence, but they must be either too short range or too weak to have significant influence or we would have detected them.
So if you want to suggest a physical influence that is outside this model, you need to do more than simply assert it, you need to show how the current model is wrong, how this novel interaction can occur, how such interaction can produce results consistent with reported claims of non-physical influences, and how your new model accounts for everything the current model describes including this novel interaction that breaks the current model.
Until then, I'll continue attributing reported claims of non-physical influences to well-known, but mundane, human failings (of perception, interpretation, memory, etc).
The problem with this is, as I mentioned before, our assuming substance to our concepts and words. I love the phrase CS Lewis used in "
Till We Have Faces":
"...the babble we think we mean." But, it seems we must do what we do. We always argue from OUR human, temporal, ignorant perspective.
And I don't mean that logic is itself invalid or useless in the face of First Cause. It, too, descends from him. WE must answer to logic in our descriptions of him. But he does not answer to it, though it always fits him. Ours? —not so much. We are no purveyors of truth and wisdom. Logic is a tool, but also a governor. Never assume that we don't assume something, nor that we have not failed to assume something that would turn this whole structure we have built on its head.
But, yes, we can only do what we must do.