It's an assumption that entails a causally efficacious necessary being, which is unique .... Theists are drawn to the assumption of a causally efficacious necessary being, while atheists would propose the brute fact. — Relativist
While it's true that the PSR has traditionally been pressed into the service of theistic arguments, that it necessarily entails a 'causally efficacious necessary being' is just another unargued-for assertion. In any case, 'brute fact' plays right into the hands of fideism anyway, so the alignment of the one with theism and the other with atheism is largely a forced and unconvincing one.
In case I haven't dumbed it down enough;
What is a sufficient reason? — Posty McPostface
. If you'd like to discuss whether or not the Leibniz' Cosmological Argument makes a good case for God's existence, — Relativist
Are you suggesting an atheist is having faith in atheism, or that this sends theists into expressions of faith? — Relativist
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