Sir Bang wrote:You don't have to suppose that there is an architect of the universe, irrespective of whether s/he exists or not. Why?
Because the hypothesis of God does not help us to make any predictions.
In other words, let's put it this way: If the business of Science is to make predictions about what's going to happen, you do not need God as a hypothesis (to make succesful predictions), because it makes no difference to anything. If you say everthing is controlled by God, everything is governed by God, that doesn't make any difference to your prediciton of what's going to happen. But if you can predict, if you can study the past, describe how things have behaved, and you've got some regularities in the behaviour in the universe then you can begin to understand the law of the universe (or at least regularities) and so the whole architect hypothesis becomes irrelevant. Get rid of the lawmaker, keep the law.
Irrelevant to what? I guess what I'm asking is what are you trying to predict. If you talking about some thing like predicting the effects of global warming that's fine. But if your talking about predicting the future course of a life forms evolutionary process, it' wrong. The reason is because you starting with a faulty idea that life came from an evolution. That's like mapping out directions without knowing where you're coming from.
One thing that I want to make clear is that I have nothing against science, I have nothing against the scientific process. In school I actually loved science. If you can study something and learn more about it even predicting what will happen, I'm all for it. Why I do take issue is when you scientific data is twisted and stretched for the purpose of coming to a conclusion.