I agreee; since the cre-evo debates are so boring, perhaps we can begin a discussion concerning much more interesting issues: (1) how many universes are there (ie are they created every moment or at longer intervals)?; and (2) how many times has our own universe collapsed and expanded?
This has relevance to evolution, because it raises the issue of whether or not atomic particles, by natural law, form simple RNA/DNA structures that eventually enable the formation of intelligent beings.
If the development of RNA/DNA is as natural as the creation of hydrogen, then how many civilisations have existed in our own and other universes?
All suggestions are welcome.
Our universe is but one of an infinite number, all of which will support some form of life. Each universe has a start and an end and receives its 'matter' from a neighbouring universe through black holes (singular or plural) in the parent universe.
Because the number of universes is infinite in number and their creation and deaths are all staggered, at least one universe will have existed at any given time in the infinite past and will exist in the infinite future. The direction of time is reversed in some universes allowing those universes to give birth to their parent(s). Indeed since time has no meaning in the void which is the 'womb' the universes are born into, any daughter universe can also be the parent of any other universe.
In every one of these universes there exists at least one organism that reaches an intelligence capable of entering, and seeding with their own DNA, at least one neighbour universe. In this way, only natural causes that can be traced infinitely far back are needed to explain the creation of both matter and biological organisms.