If we can see no evidence or reason for a God, then either He does not exist or His existence is irrelevant because He does not want to be known.It's claimants say yes, but creationism's reliance upon omnipotence and omniscience make it untestable and therefore unscientific since an omnipotent and omniscient entity could hide itself perfectly from us, thereby rendering the results of any test useless.
Not at all. If we assume nothing exists out of time, two things are then assumed to be true:Further, it's my opinion that if we assume an intelligence can exist outside time then we can assume non-intelligence can exist outside time. Since intelligence existing outside time represents an extra assumption ontop of the idea of just existing outside time (in opposition to non-intelligence existing outside time), the idea of intelligence existing outside time fails Occam's razor in this comparison. Less complexity/fewer assumptions = more likely between two ideas, everything else being equal.
1) Time is infinite
2) Time applies to everything.
Both of which are larger, more untestable theories than positing something sentient does indeed exist out of time. You can't really use Occam's razor in metaphysics, it's far too multi-layered. By its nature metaphysical theories are extremely complicated. They have to take everything into account, literally.
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