Thanks. It's refreshing to occasionally encounter a theist who'll simply own up and admit that their wild claims are unsubstantiated.
Does it? Or are you still resorting to fanciful, unsubstantiated baloney?
It's much more accurate to say that since there is
no evidence for an intelligent creator, science isn't going to make any effort to accommodate such an imaginary factor into the equation.
It'd be like getting huffy because mathematicians refuse to include leprechauns in the equation! Imagine ...
1+1+leprechauns = 2 (and leprechauns)
The evidence
does seem to point to some sort of common ancestor. Damn those inescapable conclusions based on evidence!
Rather than just make stuff up whole-cloth, science must be content to deal only with what is supported by evidence. So we may never know the exact details regarding the origin of life. You can let this mystery vex you to the point where you'll accept theological (non-)explanations, or you can simply accept not knowing (yet).
Anyway, evolution isn't an attempt to explain the origin of life. It's simply the best working model we have to explain
speciation. That's all.
Again, it's much more honest to say "I don't know" then to make stuff up.
Science doesn't claim to know what kind of "bug or plankton" was involved,
so to drop the word "unsubstantiated" into the mix is misleading.
I'm not going to fault science for failing to invent fanciful (non-)explanations for the origin of life. Sorry.
More unsubstantiated claims. Argument from ignorance.
Q. - So who created God?
If the answer is "nothing" you can add Special Pleading to the laundry list of fallacies involved in creationism.
You have not demonstrated that "the devil" even exists. That makes
two imaginary beings!
It's a celestial two-fer!
If we throw in The Trinity, it's an even better deal. Just think: If you get tricked into buying the Brooklyn Bridge, you've only been hoodwinked once. If you're getting ready to fork over your cash for the Brooklyn Bridge, and the con man throws in the Golden Gate Bridge ... maybe you should pause and reflect?
Believing that the entire universe was created
ex nihilo on your behalf so you could have a personal relationship with an alleged-to-exist supernatural being isn't humility. It's the Nth degree of egotistical hubris.
So you believe that your god had no option?
You believe that your god was obliged to create the universe?
Because if your god
wasn't obliged to create the universe, it seems to me that chance is still
very much a part of the equation. Theists who believe that their god had options regarding creation actually rely
entirely on chance as a bedrock assumption in their worldview.
So it seems odd to me that they turn their nose up and cry "chance" on evolution, which basically describes an inevitable process resulting from three simple factors:
1.) Creatures mate.
2.) Traits are inheritable.
3.) Populations can become isolated.
Actually, to compare the universe to a mere painting that was
demonstrably painted by a human being is insane.
The artist might have painted something else. So there was some chance involved. Or the artist might have not painted anything. Again ... chance is involved.
Anyway, your analogy is flawed. We know that paintings are painted. We do not know that the universe was created.
Organs didn't appear by chance. The evidence suggests that they evolved.
It's amusing. Theists insist that God created man in his own image ... they then cite human creations as evidence that evolution cannot happen ... but they ignore the fact that human creations clearly evolve over time.
Right. God had no choice. So it wasn't even a 50/50 coin flip. God
had to create the universe.
If so ... what compelled your god to create?
So you're saying that free will and divine will are essentially polar opposites? Divine will means you have no choice in the matter, correct? I guess that's why they call "free will" free?
Speaking on the behalf of your creator deity as if you have some sort of Celestial Hotline is also the Nth degree of hubris.
And
Neptune isn't a large rock. Its core is apparently believed to be composed of iron and nickel.
And
even if the science that suggests that this is the case turns out to be wrong, that doesn't mean that we
know that Neptune's core is composed of rock.
Even if it were discovered that Neptune's core actually
is made of rock, science will simply amend itself and move on. Meanwhile, theists will still be obliged to resort to semantic tap-dancing to explain why the mustard seed is the smallest of all seeds or why the Bible also declares that the hyrax chews its cud.