If science comes up with naturalistic answers for the origins of life and the universe how would it be anything other than speculation of what happened.
Science is more than speculation. When the science gets man to the moon and back or conquers polio, it has been confirmed as correct.
What's pure speculation are myths and unfalsifiable god claims.
The answers should be "If a creator/ God did not do it, then we think it might have happened this way".
We don't say that maybe biblical creationism is accurate, but if a god didn't create the kinds, maybe they evolved. We say that they evolved, and if there's a god, that how it did it.
What you probably mean is that your interpretation of what the Bible means has been debunked.
Yes, and all but biblical literalists agree that those myths have been falsified, although they eschew language like debunked, refuted, and error. They like to say allegory and metaphor, but myth is neither as I explained (you didn't comment): "
Incidentally, a myth is not an allegory or metaphor. The latter are specific literary forms which myth doesn't meet. They include substituting symbols for known people, objects, and events. Myths don't. They attempt to explain the unknown with free speculation." When you ignore comments like that, I assume that you either couldn't understand them, never looked at the words, or felt that you couldn't offer a counterargument.
But that is OK. Your interpretation is wrong.
No, yours is, but that's understandable. You have chosen to believe falsehoods and feel the need to reconcile them with the science, which makes you a cut above the literalist who keeps insisting that there were six days of creation, a first two human beings created de novo, and a global flood. You're willing to agree that that didn't happen, that when the book says
day, it meant some metaphorical use of the word rather than a literal day, which is clearly incorrect. The word was meant as a 24-hour period. The days of creation contain mornings and evenings unlike metaphorical days ("In my father's day, "). Also, the Hebrews clearly understood the seventh day to be a literal day that their god commanded them to emulate spending at rest.
Design is evidence of life, the life of a designer.
What design? Are you referring to the patterns in nature, like six-sided snowflakes, double helices, and spiral galaxies? You're playing a creationist word game wherein one tries to bootstrap his deity in using words like design for pattern and creation for nature. Design and creation imply a conscious designer and creator, but calling them patterns and nature doesn't invoke an intelligent agent. We don't think of a patterner or naturer when we see those words, so apologists prefer to use the tendentious ones.
a designer/creator is not postulated in science
By that, I presume that you mean a conscious agent responsible for the regular patterns found examining nature. No such thing is needed to account for any observation to date, so none is postulated.
PLUS there is evidence in human experience for God and spirits.
I don't consider these subjective reports interpreting experience as evidence of anything other than that people can have such experiences, but not evidence that understanding them as sensing something other than one's own mind is correct. I had experiences when I was a Christian that I routinely understood as the Holy Spirit communicating with me. Later, new evidence revealed to me that it was not that. If you're interested, I describe that
here.
I have evidence for the undetectable but no evidence for the non existent.
They are indistinguishable. We decide that something exists when it is detected.
We can't believe all the conclusions people come to about their experiences and what they are told they are caused by. That doe not mean that they do not have those experiences.
Exactly. We shouldn't believe them just because they report experiencing a spiritual realm or a deity.
It is just a furphy to think that there is no God just because no God can be found in this universe.
There you go again with the unbelief/disbelief conflation. Will you NEVER grasp that that is NOT the claim of the agnostc atheist?
You have also been deceived if you think that science knows that the universe could assemble itself.
No, you've been deceived to think that we don't know how that happened. Yes, there are still unanswered questions, such as how and when the earliest stars and galaxies formed, but the order and timing of most of that story is understood and well established.
I wonder why you think you're qualified to make the comment you did. I'm pretty sure that you know very little of what the science explains and the evidence it offers in support of those claims. That history is known in tremendous detail. Do you understand this graphic?
Personally I don't see that time goes back to infinity. Infinite time into the past means that we cannot be here yet.
You're only looking at part of the problem. The alternative is equally counterintuitive - that time and existence had a beginning. As I see it, whatever the original substance of reality was, it either never began to exist or came into being uncaused from nothing. Unless you can think of another possibility, then whatever is the case, it seems that it must be one of these. Either by itself sounds ridiculous and fit to dismiss out of hand as you have done with one of them. But eliminating either without a sound argument generates a non sequitur, an unjustified leap of faith.
I believe in the God who works in history and knew and told us of the Jews going back to the land they were given and being surrounded by enemies etc etc.
That became a self-fulfilling prophecy when, in the 20th century, people made it happen knowing what was redicted.
That is a silly thing to say when you also say that science does not prove anything.
What I said is that empiricism is the only path to knowledge. Did you want to disagree? Maybe you don't mean what I do with the word knowledge.
I have experienced the swarming as if it is a team effort to overwhelm.
That's all you. You frame discussion as attack. You could learn a thing or two from those who you demean - from their demeanor. Nobody describes the faithful in such language, and we aren't offended by their beliefs or their disagreement with ours. When they get called out, it's for things like what you're doing here, and I will again now.
I've commented on your dehumanizing language, but as usual, there's no evidence you saw that - no comment on it, and no change in behavior. So, I guess you need to read this again: Using insect language is done specifically to dehumanize. It's what Hitler and now Trump have done with the use of the word vermin.
I've done it myself: "
I wonder what insects that were in the shape of human beings and had the gift of language would do that the Republicans wouldn't do - a sort of a men-in-black scenario. What won't a MAGA Republican, which is 90% of them, do because it is immoral or un-American to him?"
And, I've referred to the Trump offspring as his larvae. My purpose in both cases was to demean these people and express moral outrage and contempt for who and what they are. How about you now?
There are many things we can study which want to tell us the Bible is untrue. It certainly takes faith to believe and keep believing.
You say that like it's a good thing. If something can only be believed by faith, it shouldn't be believed.