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Not believing in (a) God is the logical stance, as there is no evidence. You cannot prove an absolute negative. Thus, it is logical to assume God does not exist. An athiest does not possess faith, as conclusive evidence as to God's existence would lead to acknowledgement of God's existence. religious people, however, continue to make a baseless assertion about reality. That is what we call faith. Do you see the difference? I doubt I can be bothered to try and convince you if not.
You have a double standard here. You are saying that the ability to prove something should determine its truth value, but then you ignore this attribute when it comes to believing that God doesn't exist.
Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. There is no way to prove that God does exist, therefore it would be impossible for someone to believe in God following your "logic," because it can't be proven that he does exist.
If it can't be proven true or false, it is just as arbitrary to assume that it is true as to assume that it is false. Both cases are assumptions without any evidence.
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All that said I STILL think that it's an awfully large mathematical impossibility that all things aligned to have even ONE living creature come to fruition in lieu of the fact no other planet has such success in doing so. I mean everything has to be a-number-1-perfect.
I think the argument here should be pointing to things like the universal constant or the gravitational constant. If these fundamental scientific laws that seemingly govern all matter were 1/10000000000th of a degree different, life would not be able to exist, as far as we can tell.
I think whats missing from this argument is the acknowledgment that we are trying to judge this from a very limited perspective. First of all our scientific laws aren't necessarily comprehensive or even true, we are limited to our ability to measure with the senses which is an extreme disability when it comes to studying subatomic particles which are mostly empty space, and we are operating from the assumption that the universe is intelligible to us in a way that we can understand.
And since when was there an actual comprehensive big-bang theory that could answer the fundamental questions such as "where did the big bang come from, what started it, etc..?) Could someone link that theory for me, because I haven't heard of one that existed that could actually explain the "big bang."