In the past it appeared you might often mistake things I say possibly from not reading more fully/carefully (perhaps you'd have thought you already know what is being said, and just skim some of a post, not bother to see quotes, etc., and then fill in the blanks (parts you didn't read carefully) with imagined other things you expect, instead of what is there.
Your conflated usage of the term 'flood' in the biblical context, with a pre-biotic water world, in order to highlight a supposedly overly broad statement, I also find, as being about as clear as mud. This is not the first time you've used flawed and confused analogies, which only end up appearing as an attempt to conceal an undistinguished tenet.
Scientific thinking seeks displays of the principles of an argument in the argument itself. Dismissals predicated by your use of 'of course ..' are insufficient, because the speaker's personal interpretations are irrelevant in the first place.
You always seem to do badly when you jump in to respond to me in a thread where I was talking with someone else -- you more often seem to mistake what I'm saying, etc.
But here maybe you simply are unaware that nature
could flood the Earth. (just physics in action)
Flooding a majority of all the dry land of Earth (say 60%+) in just weeks. (water that would mostly recede then in months or a year) Quite possible. When I pointed that out and how (giving a mechanism), it was to correct one of the errors in an overly broad statement that neither god nor nature could do that. Nature
could do so, so the statement is false, but that wasn't the main reason I responded. I don't try to correct all mistaken ideas I see. I have what I think is more useful goal: to suggest that someone become more careful in their thinking, and not assume overly broad conclusions. In short, attempt to be more scientific, and therefore
not assume unexpected or amazing events could never happen.
If anyone can manage to be more cautious in their thinking and avoid overly broad conclusions, they will do better in all sorts of ways. I wish more would choose that more cautious approach to making conclusions. Many people end up living in a mental world full of egregious falsehoods from jumping to overly broad conclusions and never doubting their assumptions.