Yours is a statement of faith (anthropic principle applied to evolution).
It looks to me like Occam's razor.
Me: Yours is a statement of faith (anthropic principle applied to evolution).
RWP: It looks to me like Occam's razor.
The bottom line is that to a person whose worldview of reality ("all that there is") is that which occurs in nature - the arguments are equally asserted to rationalize the metaphysically naturalist (or atheist) worldview. For instance, that God is an unnecessary hypothesis - or that physical laws and constants had to be the way they were for physicists to identify them - or that someday a physical explanation will be given for everything.
As long as it is recognized as a belief system, a religion, that is fine. But it carries no more or less weight as a scientific argument than any faith based appeal by a believer.
Again, I assert my challenges:
The challenge: I can personally accept that yours (an atheist's) is not a religious belief if you can provide plausible scientific or mathematical evidences for all of the following:
2. Prove a natural source for information in the universe and then translate it to information in biological life. This does not mean the DNA, but the communications that occur in living creatures - reduction of uncertainty of a molecular machine in going from a before state to an after state. [Shannon] It is an action, not a message i.e. a life force Possible but unexplored causes include harmonics, a universal vacuum field, geometry which gives rise to strings all of which have a Scriptural root, i.e. God speaking it all into being, Creator outside space/time.
3. Prove a natural source for the will to live, the want to live or struggle to survive that characterizes life. IOW, self-replication is not enough. In an embryo, if the cells simply self-replicated the result would be a tumor. In life, the cells are organized into functional molecular machines which communicate together striving as one organism to live. Why does the organism have a will to live? Why should the component machinery (cardiovascular, neural, etc.) cooperate to that end?
4. Explain how the incredibly delicate physical constants, physical laws and asymmetry between matter and anti-matter came to be so perfectly balanced. A slight change one way or the other and there would be no life, or no universe at all. Appeals to the plentitude argument (anything that can happen, has) will only work in an infinite past, i.e. to make that argument one would have to first answer challenge #1.
5. Explain why out of all the possible spatial and temporal dimensions our vision and mind are tuned to a particular selection of four coordinates why not three or five, etc.
6. Explain how biological semiosis arose through natural means. Semiosis refers to the language or symbols of communication in biological life - the encoding and decoding. This has two sides, the language itself (DNA, RNA) and the understanding of it. Whered it come from?
7. Explain how functional complexity arose through natural means why and how molecular machines organized around functions to the benefit of the greater organism. Of particular interest would be the functions which would not work if a key part were missing i.e. cardiovascular without the lungs, nervous system without the brain, etc.
8. Explain how eyes developed concurrently across phyla i.e. vertebrates and invertebrates and why there have been virtually no new body plans since the Cambrian Explosion. Immutable regulatory control genes is all I can think of. But why would they in particular be immutable?
9. Explain the emergence of qualia through nature likes and dislikes, pain and pleasure, love and hate, good and evil, etc. consciousness and the mind.