To "beg a question" is used differently.
Ref.....
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Begging_the_question
It would be better to say "raise the question".
I had to do that.....it's a pet peeve.
What's the name of you pet peeve?
You're quite clever when you get going, aren't you. Now no blushing! I kinda think that I knew that, and I kinda thought I had worded it right to show that but perhaps I didn't; either way, it is always nice to learn or have things clarified.
Anyway, I'm not concerned with things taking a long time.
We live on an old planet in a very old universe.
I'm in no hurry.
That's quite a string of postulates.
I don't see that they must be.
Even if I bought them, I don't see the logic behind the conclusion.
Well for one, complex things need explanation. They just do. No one looks at anything complex and assumes it just is that way. I would apply that to God, though I know it is not the usual take. I think the Origin was, and still is, simplistic, and what evolved and separated from that is eventually us. We are that Origin, the thoughts, emotions etc.
Two different things are not made the same just because one word ("design") which describes them has both strict & metaphorical uses.
This would be the metaphorical fallacy.
design is design to me. I am not arguing who designed what or how.
As you use it, "direction", just describes an emergent property of a stochastic system.
No intelligence is needed to explain the former resulting from the latter.
If you mean evolution needs no form of intelligence involved, I think you are wrong, drastically wrong. I can't see blind chance acting in such positive ways on blind matter. Sure, I see that is how we see it now, but that is because at our level, that is what we are, matter. But I don't see that in its smallest level, and I certainly think that intelligence is a more suitable answer to complex problems than luck. It is easy to ignore such though when you can't see the intelligence however, just as evolutionists ignore the design. That is what we are taught to do now: the look of design is just a bi-product. But I don't think so. It is sutble I know, and clever, as it leaves enough on the table to convince both sides, believers and unbelivers, that they are right.