Minds depend on physical brains. Religions depend on belief in souls--essentially minds that can exist independently of bodies. But experience tells us that minds depend on brain activity to function properly.
That is NOT an argument against GOD. That's an argument against SOULS.
God =/= Soul.
It's possible for souls to exist without God. Look at Jainism.
The thread was about gods, which are thinking beings that typically lack brains. If the physical conditions that produce minds (i.e. a brain) are not present, there is no reason to believe that a mind can exist. Indeed, minds seem to have a perfectly good evolutionary function: a guidance system that improves the chances for a moving physical body to survive in a constantly changing environment. What is there about physical reality that would favor the existence of brainless minds? Nothing, AFAIK.
The Teleological Argument has NOT been overturned by evolution. Who told you that? And please explain how and why evolution disproves the Teleological Argument.
I have never said that evolution disproved the teleological argument. It undercuts the credibility of that argument. If beings such as ourselves can evolve from mindless organisms by a purely mechanical process, there is no need to posit a creative role for gods. To the extent that gods fail to explain anything, they face annihilation by Occam's Razor, which is a method for determining plausibility.
Also, just because religions have failed to come up with proper explanations, that is NOT evidence against Gods existence. That's evidence that religions are man-made and false.
Which lends weight to the argument that people are prone to making up false religions. Again, the discussion is not about disproving the existence of gods in an absolute sense. It is about their credibility. Gods are key players in failed explanations, and that reduces their credibility. We do not reject belief in the tooth fairy because we can prove its non-existence beyond a shadow of a doubt. We reject belief because we can show it beyond a reasonable doubt.
Again, all this indicates is that religions are false. This doesn't have anything to do with Gods existence.
It has to do with the reasonableness of faith in their existence. Religions provide us with reasons to believe in gods. Showing religions to be habitually false tends to render belief in gods an unreasonable belief.
This is NOT evidence against God either. This is just evidence that everyone's praying to the wrong God, or perhaps the God that does exist is the Deist God who does not interact with the world.
Miracles are evidence FOR belief in gods. Why else would anyone be interested in them? What we see in reality is that people will go to great lengths to sustain belief in gods. They see the faces of gods in tacos, pancakes, and unusual patterns of fur on animals. By showing that miracles always have natural causes, to the extent that they can be investigated, we show that using alleged miracles to sustain belief in gods is unreasonable.
Really? I thought that was the weakest. Why? For one, it had absolutely nothing to do with God. It's possible to refute souls, yet God still remains.
Gods, like souls, are brainless minds. We know that our minds are not brainless and that consciousness depends on the physical activity in a brain. Gods are supposed to have minds like ours, but our minds require brain activity to sustain them.
Also, you didn't even demonstrate why souls don't exist. You simply stated that it's obvious that they don't. That's not a valid argument. Seriously, look up the Interactionist Theory of Soul. You have done nothing to refute that.
I do not need to disprove the interactionist theory. Its proponents first need to show why they support it. Otherwise, we have to come up with a good explanation of just how a soul interacts with a brain. What does it do? Make decisions? Then why do drunk people have poorer judgment than sober people?
In the end, we can discard all of science in favor of supernatural explanations for everything. There is no force of gravity, just spirits that hold things together. Fire needs magic, not oxygen, to sustain it. How could you prove otherwise? By removing oxygen and watching the fire die down? You might think of that as evidence for the necessity of oxygen, but it could just be that the spirits want us to believe that. It is just as plausible an explanation as an argument that we don't see God every day because he chooses not to give us direct evidence of his existence.