I've been a lurker for quite awhile, but I'm going to take a crack at it.
I don't see how scientific notions are seen to simplify our understanding when they actually make it more complex/complicated.
The world appears more complex now (especially at a biochemical level) and yet I am supposed to find more reasons to reject a creator?)
I don't know what a God would be like or what life is about but I think its important to be honest about our limitations of knowledge and not let children believe that we know all the answers one way or the other.
Scientific discoveries in biochemistry has not made life any more or less complex. It is just offers and explanation as to what happens at the molecular level in our bodies.
You must know this is dishonest . Being a Christian means being a follower of christ but that is not all there is to Christianity. Atheism encompasses such things as no belief in the afterlife or anything deemed scientifically untestable. I wouldn't rail against atheism if they were simply nonbelievers in the supernatural. they are active in promoting and praising their own notions and mocking the religious.
I have simply asked for an atheistic explanation for existence and I have elucidated this point quite cleary through my posts. Such as the example of a driverless car. There maybe an explanation for a car moving without a driver but an explanation demands itself. Your "so what" seems to be mocking your own scientific endeavours.
As someone has said, atheism neither offer nor require an explanation as to how life came to be. It is merely the belief in the absence of god. Atheism and science are often seen together, but they are not inherently inclusive.
And what does a driving car have to do with anything? Cars do not exist spontaneously, and cars are not innate to the natural world. If you're going to have a discussion as to how the natural world came to be, using examples of manufactered technological devices is not very convincing.
I am frightened because I can't explain my existence. You can call that negative and it probably motivates other likeminded people to pursue religion to silence their questions.
I am happy for people to remain atheists as long as they don't promote it as a logical or rational conclusion.
I'm afraid of aligators, it doesn't mean that I should deny their existence. Your personal opinions regarding the issue does not affect the facts.
I don't understand this objection.
The sky train in vancouver is designed and operated by humans.
You wouldn't assume that human artefacts weren't designed but you are going to assume that natural laws and oredered systems weren't designed?
Again, human machineries are not good evidence as to what happens in the natural world.
This debate wasn't about evidence FOR god it was about evidence SUPPORTING atheism.
Everything is evidence for deism because their is no scientifically logical reason for anything to exist.
So once again atheism is based on a COMPLETE fallacy about the nature of things.
The existence of matter (for the most part) is binary. Matter either exist, or it does not. It isn't evidence for either schools of philosophy.
Science explains the physical, not the metaphysical so there really isn't a big question as to
why they exist. That's a question that is outside of science. But if you're asking about
how things came to be, that is something that could be potentionally answered by science.
I am not arguing about wether things exist but wether things can exist with no cause.
I have yet to hear what the basis for believing that everything we see and experience can exist independently of any action to create.
Things "just exist" according" to atheists. Lame and dishonest I say.
I would be a non deist if I had ever heard an adequate justification that didn't involve knocking comic notions of bearded GOds.
I have had a revelation to day
Nothing can exist independent of cause. I will never again see any validity in atheism.
It is illogical plain and simple (and reactionary)
You're absolutely right, there is a huge element of the mystery behind how matter came to be, and I honestly don't know the answer. But that's no reason to make something up.