Regarding peter's second question, lest it be forgotton:
peter wrote:but before I go I have a genuine question to ask of the scientists (and if they can succeed in their quest to finally eliminate the need for a Creator I have no argument except to pose the further logical question that 'if something can be explained without something else being so, is that the same as saying that the something else isn't so). I have no understanding of mathematics, and I'm told that trying to understand the picture physics creates of the Creation without this is like trying to understand Bach from a position of congenital deafness.
Ockham's razor is, "All other things being equal, the simplest solution tends to be the best one." People make a mistake when they don't emphasize the "tends to", and they really go wrong when they forget about the "all other things being equal".
The simplest solution is not always the correct solution. Anyone who says so is wrong. However, if you are presented with several
equally likely solutions, the simplest one is the way to bet, sure. But this is nothing more than a scientific "hit on 16, hold on 17". It may lead to the correct solution, but nothing says it
must.
Using Ockham's razor to "prove" God doesn't exist, on the basis that the universe can be explained without him, is a logical fallacy, at least so far as the notion has been presented to me. For one, scientific explanations for the creation of the universe inject quite a few complexities in their own right, and are not "simpler" than intelligent creation by any means. But it's certainly true that the different theories, spiritual or scientific, are not "equal" either. How could they be?
I'm not asserting intelligent creation, I am just saying that such proofs that god doesn't exist fail in my estimation.