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Oreoracle
Guest
The existence of the universe isn’t a deduction from anything at all. We assume it exists because of our sensory data.The existence of the universe is not a logical deduction from what the universe is. The universe isn’t anything over and above space, time, matter and energy.
It could not exist, unless I define matter to be eternal, or metaphysically necessary, or maximally great, or whatever other trick theologians use to “prove” God’s existence. When God is defined to be maximally great in the ontological argument, for example, that is really a crucial assumption. To define something as maximally great is to assume its metaphysical necessity, which is to assume its existence.Since all of these began to exist 13.7 billion years ago, existence isn’t integral to the universe. It could “not exist,” therefore it isn’t true that universe accounts for its own existence.
Again, list any properties you ascribe to God to infer his existence, and I can do the exact same thing by substituting “universe” in place of God.Since existence is not logically entailed by anything about the universe there is no warrant for claiming it explains itself.
Occam’s razor is only applied when both ideas explain something equally well. It’s a tie-breaker, basically. When all else is equal, the simplest should win.An egg does not, of itself, explain the chicken because the egg itself needs to be explained. It is not sufficient to claim the egg is simpler than the chicken, so therefore Occam’s razor eliminates the heavy lifting required by the principle of sufficient reason by cutting out the need to explain anything.