Like I've stated many times- neither of us know. And to say you do
I have faith. When I say "I know" I am asserting faith based on evidence of an intelligent creator. I don't deny having faith, I don't deny that there are unknowable things within the universe.
But if you can't define or hypothesize anything having to do with the claim or have any legitimate evidence, you don't have anything to do with the scientific field.
At its best, science is an unfettered (but ethically and intellectually responsible) and progressive search for the truth about our world based on reasoned analysis of empirical observations. The very antithesis of an unfettered search for truth occurs when scientists don intellectual blinkers and assert dogmatically that all conclusions must conform to “materialist” philosophy. Such an approach prevents the facts from speaking for themselves. The search for truth can only suffer when it is artificially constrained by those who would impose materialist orthodoxy by authoritarian fiat before the investigation has even begun. This approach obviously begs the question, but, sadly, it is all too common among those who would cloak their metaphysical prejudices with the authority of institutional science or the law.
http://www.uncommondescent.com/faq/#notscisuch light can be from far off stars or nebulae.
Speculation, not evidence.
Let's give some more examples of what you would have to believe in denying a creator.
Neither RNA or DNA can be synthesized in the absence of enzymes. In theory and RNA replicase could exist and code for it's own replication. The first synthesized RNA replicase was four times longer than any RNA that could form spontaneously. In addition, it was able to replicate only 16 base pairs at most, so it couldn't even replicate itself.
So, I guess in order to continue to deny a creator you're going to have to
apply a "science of the gaps" here.
Enzymes cannot be synthesized in the absence of RNA and ribosomes. So,
"science of the gaps"
Nucleosides and amino acieds cannot form in the presence of oxygen, which is now known to be present on the earth for at least 4 billion years although life arose at least ~3.5 billion years ago.
So here, to maintain there was no creator, you will have to
discard geological and chemistry data.
That natural explanation for origins becomes less reasonable with advancing scientific research. To maintain that a creative intelligence had nothing to do with it, well....it takes a great deal of non-reason
And a coffee pot as an example for the entire universe?
Do you think I'm an idiot? I do not need to look at the manufacturing company and brand name of my coffee pot, or need to observe the imprint of MADE IN CHINA, to know that it is designed by intelligence. I didn't pick up that coffee pot thinking that somehow molecules had ordered themselves together over eons of time to somehow produce what is now known as a coffee pot. Then ALL OF A SUDDEN I see Hamilton Beach on the back! Oh darn, I guess it wasn't made from random mutation acting on natural selection!
But I guess you need that? You need to know who made your appliances and electronics, in order to know that an intelligent being designed it? Furthermore, who invented it? Who ultimately invented and came up with whole idea of a coffee pot?! I must know this in order to know for SURE that my coffee pot is not a random product of mindless natural processes. LOLOLOLOL
I'm sure you yourself are not an idiot and can comprehend a simple comparison to the reason for not needing to define a designer to know design when you see it. Cheap tactic to try and undermine my position.
Creationists will never be able to do that.
You are confusing two different areas here. ID
can do that. Are there creationists within ID study? Yes, but their own personal belief of who the designer is, is not part of the science they are conducting and asserting as theory. That is the realm of theology. Determining whether or not biological systems were intelligently designed is a legitimate scientific question.