CoxRox, I'm not sure where the leap between atoms and the creator is. "I think, therefore God is"? ![Tongue Tongue](https://atheistforums.org/images/smilies/tongue.gif)
From our discussion on the nature of gods, didn't you end up with a transdimensional, thoughtless, desireless string of undecaying matter? Apart from it being slightly "out there", it doesn't even resemble a God anymore. It's just "a part of the universe that always was". No plan, no conscious, nothing. Just matter.
So if we put it this way... "atoms and life to me are evidence for a transdimensional, thoughtless, desireless string of undecaying matter which creates universes", it starts to look a little non sequitar. But like you said, we obviously see it differently and will only end up going around in circles over this. Suppose we'll call it even for now
![Tongue Tongue](https://atheistforums.org/images/smilies/tongue.gif)
From our discussion on the nature of gods, didn't you end up with a transdimensional, thoughtless, desireless string of undecaying matter? Apart from it being slightly "out there", it doesn't even resemble a God anymore. It's just "a part of the universe that always was". No plan, no conscious, nothing. Just matter.
So if we put it this way... "atoms and life to me are evidence for a transdimensional, thoughtless, desireless string of undecaying matter which creates universes", it starts to look a little non sequitar. But like you said, we obviously see it differently and will only end up going around in circles over this. Suppose we'll call it even for now
![Smile Smile](https://atheistforums.org/images/smilies/smile.gif)