I am having trouble following you. First, I haven't the faintest idea what all those symbols and letters mean. Not sure you do either! Anyway, they're not necessary and I do know that whatever they mean, they do not capture my argument for my argument certainly committed no modal fallacy.
According to the aseity argument you outlined in you latest post, it is logically necessary that if we have free will, we exist with aseity, and, thus, are morally responsible. — ToothyMaw
The argument assumes we are morally responsible and have free will and concludes that we exist with aseity.
I did not say 'necessary' once. So you're introducing the notion of necessity, not me. It is not present in my argument. I do not believe in necessary truths. The argument I made was deductively valid and all of its premises are true, or at least are far more reasonably believed than disbelieved. So its premises are 'true' (not 'necessarily' true, just true) and its conclusion is too. Not necessarily: it just is.
You also seem to be confusing the claim that aseity is required for moral responsibility with the different claim that if we exist with aseity we 'are' morally responsible.
I have not made that claim. Something could exist with aseity yet not be morally responsible. It is the reverse that I deny.
You're the one committing fallacies. This:
1. If P, then Q
2. Q
3. therefore P
is fallacious. Yet that's how you're reasoning. For my argument establishes the truth of this premise:
1. If we are morally responsible, we exist with aseity
But you've reasoned like this:
2. We exist with aseity.
3. Therefore we are morally responsible
That's a fallacious argument and it is no argument I made. Note, my claim is that aseity is needed for moral responsibility, but that does not entail that it is sufficient.
Again, this is how I have reasoned:
1. If we are morally responsible, we exist with aseity
2. We are morally responsible
3. Therefore, we exist with aseity
Presumably what you are doing is arguing that despite existing with aseity, we lack moral responsibility because we did not choose to exist with aseity - is that correct? That's what this suggests.
I mean, we have no control over whether or not we have free will, and thus exist with aseity, and thus have moral responsibility. How could we control those things? — ToothyMaw
You're assuming, falsely - indeed, absurdly - that to be morally responsible we need to have 'control' over everything that contributes to our decisions. That's ridiculous and has no support from our reason.
Take an everyday example: John says "P" and that annoys me and I punch him. Am I morally responsible for punching him? Intuitively, yes. What about the fact - the obvious fact - that I had no control over John saying "P"? Can I appeal to that as an excuse? No, nobody in their right mind would accept that as an excuse, even though it is obviously true that I lacked control over John saying "P".
What's needed for moral responsibility - as my argument shows - is not control over everything, but the power truly to originate one's decisions.