Because the way you answer the question is by putting physical laws over logical laws.
The question was, “Why doesn’t just anything have no explanation.” And you answered that question yourself, when you said , “I acknowledge that contingent things can explain contingent things”. I am OK with that answer.
The Principle of Sufficient Reason is a powerful and controversial
philosophical
principle stipulating that everything must have a reason or cause.
I have bolded the relevant parts for you here. While indeed some people describe the PSR as a fourth law, nexts to the classic laws of logic, this is quite controversial and as long as it hasn’t been proven or it isn’t obvious that the PSR is true, I don’t consider it a law.
Well, agents can make contingent choices though (sorry for the misunderstanding.) It doesn’t seem you’ve been able to establish that it can’t. I’ll have to look further int this though.
I very much doubt that** necessary** agents (if they exist) can make contingent choices, but let me repeat what I actually said.
“I am willing to grant that an agent’s will is a sufficient condition for an agent’s decision, but if the agent is a sufficient condition for the agent’s will, it follows that only a different agent can account for a different will, in which case the agent has no free will.”
So in case a necessary agent is a SC for his will, it follows that he cannot make contingent choices.
“If , on the other hand, the agent is not a SC for his decision, the agent’s will is not explained, and violates the PSR.”
So, in this case, the agent can make a contingent choice, but this choice is unexplained, and violates the PSR.
Well, it would seem that it would require that the locations of particles couldn’t have been different.
A quantum vacuum is not a sufficient condition for the location of the virtual particles, hence, if a QV (or something similar to it) is necessary, it is not true that the universe resulting from it would be the same in every possible world.
Says Thomas of Aquino.
I would love to see the quote, because omnipotence is all about potentiality. That’s what power is for crying out loud. It’s a being’s potential to do something.
If that is what power is, then the Thomist God has no power. But, you’ll have to take that up with a Thomist.
That would be question-begging.
No, because you’d have another reason to say that there is a necessary being. Begging the question is when the only reason you have for accepting a premise is that you already accept the conclusion, and that’s not the situation we would have.
In that case you have two conflicting arguments. So until it is porven that the PSR is correct, you cannot just assert without begging the question that nothingness is impossible.
What? I was referring to my point about my point being about the LOCATIONS of particles, which would seem to have to be as is if the universe is necessary.
If the locations can be different, it is false that a necessary quantum vacuum can only give one result.
Well, without the quantum vacuum having free will, I think Peter van Inwagen’s objection would work on it. Again I have to look into this more though.
What exactly is Van Inwagen’s objection?